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+23 +1
iOS 15 lets you spy on apps that might be spying on you
Apple is cracking down on how apps access your private data, such as location data, photos, camera, microphone, as well as what domains the apps are communicating with. And part of that is giving users the ability to find out what the apps that they have installed are up to.
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+22 +1
Tim Cook tells Apple employees he’s ‘looking forward to moving forward’ after Epic ruling
Apple prevailed on nine of 10 counts in the lawsuit.
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+25 +1
A decade and a half of instability: The history of Google messaging apps
Google Talk, Google's first-ever instant messaging platform, launched on August 24, 2005. This company has been in the messaging business for 16 years, meaning Google has been making messaging clients for longer than some of its rivals have existed. But thanks to a decade and a half of nearly constant strategy changes, competing product launches, and internal sabotage, you can't say Google has a dominant or even stable instant messaging platform today.
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+23 +1
Google is kicking ‘sugar dating’ apps out of the Play Store
Dormant developer accounts now also face removal. “Sugar dating” apps will not be allowed on the Android Play Store from September 1st, Google has announced as part of a series of policy changes for the platform. The change, which was first reported by Android Police, specifically prohibits apps relating to “compensated sexual relationships.” Other changes coming to the platform include a new crackdown on inactive developer accounts, Google says.
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+15 +1
Scammy iOS app discovered that refuses to open unless you give it a good review
App developer and scam app hunter Kosta Eleftheriou’s latest discovery is a real doozy, an iOS app that refuses to function before you give it at least a 3-star review in the App Store. Although the UPNP Xtreme app — which claimed to let users stream video to their TVs — now appears to have been pulled, we were able to verify that it generates the App Store rating box the second it opens. You can’t dismiss the ratings box, nor can you tap the 1 or 2-star ratings, Eleftheriou said.
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+20 +1
GasBuddy tops Apple App store amid gas shortages from Colonial Pipeline shutdown
GasBuddy, an app that helps users find and save money on gas, topped the Apple App Store on Wednesday, as some consumers across the East Coast continue to struggle to find fuel after a cyberattack on Colonial Pipeline.
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+26 +1
Google is limiting which apps can see everything else you have installed
Google will soon be more selective about which apps on the Play Store can see all of the other apps you have installed (via XDA-Developers). As Ars Technica points out, your list of installed apps, innocent as it seems, can communicate to developers personal traits like dating preferences and political affiliations. So starting on May 5th, 2021, developers will have to provide a very good reason for why Google should let you access info like that.
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+11 +1
A Descriptive List Of Alternative App Stores For 2021
After immense research, we have compiled a collection of the best alternative app stores for Android and iOS for app publishers to consider - don't miss out on the complete list!
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+13 +1
Google Maps is finally rolling out a proper dark mode
Google has been teasing a dark theme for Maps for over a year now, and it even briefly rolled out to a few people, but it was never properly formalized or acknowledged officially. That changed last month when Google finally announced that dark mode is coming, and now, it's starting to roll out more widely.
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+21 +1
Warning Signal: the messaging app’s new features are causing internal turmoil
Signal promised to be different from other messaging apps — but will the company’s focus on growth compromise its mission?
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+21 +1
App Store Best of 2020 Winners Begin Receiving Physical Award
Apple this week announced its App Store Best of 2020 winners, recognizing 15 apps released over the course of the year. For the first time, winners are now receiving a physical award, and some developers have begun sharing their respective awards over the past few days.
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+16 +1
Apple Fitness+ instructors tease their workouts ahead of launch
Ahead of the launch of Apple Fitness+ the service's instructors have taken to Instagram to tease the workouts you'll be able to do.
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+13 +1
Apple cuts App Store commission rate to 15% for many developers with new Small Business Program - 9to5Mac
Apple has announced a notable change to its App Store commission structure today. The company is launching the App Store Small Business Program, which will lower the App Store commission to 15% for developers who earned up to $1 million in proceeds during the previous calendar year.
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+17 +1
Google compares similar apps head-to-head in new Play Store experiment
As one of the most important apps on a smartphone, Google is always making tweaks to the Play Store to improve its usability and design. Earlier this month, a controversial test was spotted that took hamburgers off the menu. Now the Play Store is experimenting with a new change that shows direct comparisons between similar apps to let users decide which best fits their needs.
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+16 +1
Apple made ProtonMail add in-app purchases, even though it had been free for years
On Tuesday, Congress revealed whether it thinks Amazon, Apple, Facebook, and Google are sitting on monopolies. In some cases, the answer was yes. But also, one app developer revealed to Congress that it — just like WordPress — had been forced to monetize a largely free app. That developer testified that Apple had demanded in-app purchases (IAP), even though Apple had approved its app without them two years earlier — and that when the dev dared send an email to customers notifying them of the change, Apple threatened to remove the app and blocked all updates.
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+21 +1
The Inside Story of How Signal Became the Private Messaging App for an Age of Fear and Distrust
Ama Russell and Evamelo Oleita had never been to a protest before June. But as demonstrations against systemic racism and police brutality began to spread across the U.S. earlier this year, the two 17 year-olds from Michigan, both of whom are Black, were inspired to organize one of their own.
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+12 +1
Sober Days Ahead
Sober Days Ahead is just a simple app to help you keep focus on how long you've been free from alcohol, though it would work for any addiction. No ads, no tracking, and no cost, because getting off the bottle is more important than me making a buck or two. Sobriety isn't easy, but you can do it.
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+10 +1
Apple Maps launches in-house ratings and photos system for points of interest
The original iteration of Apple Maps relied mostly on data from partners. Over time, Apple has worked to bring more of the mapping experience directly under its own control, such as with the new ground truth map initiative that it rolled out in the US last year and is expanding to several more countries before the end of 2021.
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+27 +1
How To Build An Enterprise App?
Large enterprises are bound to follow strict schedules to manage multiple tasks at one time. These enterprises are always on the lookout for saving time and extra expenses. The best way for enterprises to reach this goal is by developing a mobile enterprise app for their business.
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+26 +1
A 17-year-old high school student developed an app that records your interaction with police when you're pulled over and immediately shares it to Instagram and Facebook
In 2018, Apple launched a series of Siri Shortcuts, one of which allowed users to record police interactions and then text a designated contact when they are pulled over with the footage. The app, dubbed Police, has seen an uptick in use as the nation has erupted in widespread protests against police brutality, law enforcement's abuse of power, and systemic racism following the police killing of Minneapolis resident George Floyd. Holding law enforcement more accountable has become a centerpiece of the national discussion, and technology could play a major role in it.
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