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August 5, 2009 12:01 PM PDT

Apple censors a dictionary app

by Erica Ogg
  • 64 comments

This is just getting ridiculous.

John Gruber at Daringfireball.net points to the latest example of an iPhone application being stymied by Apple's App Store approval process. In this case, it's a dictionary app called Ninjawords (so called because ninjas are "smart, accurate, and really fast") that was rejected three times over the course of two months, mostly because "objectionable" words could be looked up and found in the dictionary's search function, Gruber reported.

It's a new version of an old story, but one that almost seems like a parody of the byzantine process of getting an app past the guardians of the App store. Here's how it went down, according to Matchstick software's Phil Crosby, one of the developers of Ninjawords, as told to John Gruber.

The first version, submitted May 13, was rejected because it crashed when run on the iPhone 3.0 OS beta. Crosby said it was fixed and resubmitted before being rejected again weeks later because it contained vulgar language, that could "be found objectionable by iPhone or iPod Touch users."

It's been established that Apple is squeamish when it comes to so-called "objectionable" content. Earlier this year an e-book app was rejected because it carried a link to "The Kama Sutra," and CNET's own David Carnoy wrote a book called "Knife Music," whose electronic version was initially rejected from the App Store for containing a scene with graphic language.

But the Ninjawords app isn't like an e-book where you have to read the whole thing to get your money's worth. This is a dictionary, a reference guide, where one has to actually look up the word in question to see it and be possibly offended by it.

Matchstick apparently played ball and tried to remove as many offensive words as it could, according to Crosby. When it submitted the application again--this time a whole new app, thus losing its place in the approval line--it was again rebuffed because more words deemed inappropriate by App Store screeners were discovered by looking them up.

Eventually the application was approved, but scrubbed clean of objectionable words and even then it was slapped with a 17+ rating, which will get filtered out by OS 3.0's parental controls. Essentially, the message from Apple, or at least an overzealous App Store approval team, is that iPhone or iPod Touch owners over 17 years old need to be told what kind of words they're allowed to look up on their Apple device.

Of course, the App Store is Apple's domain, and it can dictate what kind of content it wants to sell. But the inconsistent way in which the rules are applied--see here, here, here, and here, for starters--is bordering on the surreal.

August 22, 2008 6:07 AM PDT

Tibet album may have spurred China iTunes block

by Caroline McCarthy
  • 18 comments

An album supporting Tibetan freedom may have led China's government to sever access to Apple's iTunes Store.

This week, Chinese users of iTunes have found themselves unable to access the online store, something that Apple acknowledged but would not say whether it was a technical glitch or a move on the part of the censors.

(Credit: Art of Peace Foundation)

"We are aware of the log-on problems but we have no comment at the moment," the company told the Associated Press.

The incident comes amid the 2008 Olympics, when all eyes are on China--a country well known for its censorship.

Songs for Tibet--The Art of Peace, the album in question, was put forth by the Art of Peace Foundation. According to the nonprofit's Web site, the album supports "peace initiatives and Tibetan cultural preservation projects important to the Dalai Lama," the exiled Tibetan spiritual leader. Songs were contributed by high-profile artists like Moby, Ben Harper, John Mayer, Sting, Alanis Morissette, and Dave Matthews.

The nonprofit also speaks out against Chinese censorship of the Internet and how the country had assured that it would permit open access during the Olympics to journalists, only to pull away from that promise when the Games actually began.

"We focused on raising awareness of 'The Great Firewall of China,' the state sponsored information filtering apparatus that monitors and controls e-mails and Web sites within China," Michael Wohl, the nonprofit's executive director, said at a press conference on August 7. "The Great Firewall is a tool used by the Chinese government to stifle grassroots dissent and prevent the freedoms of speech and press. U.S. corporations play a roll in aiding and abetting the implementation of the Great Firewall of China. Though the issue is complex, it requires substantially more public discussion on how U.S. information technology is being used to deny 1.3 billion people fundamental rights."

Wohl told the AP that he believes the Chinese government blocked access to the iTunes Store when the Art of Peace Foundation publicized this week that more than 40 Olympic athletes had downloaded the digital album in solidarity with the Tibetan cause.

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At the start of the 21st century, there's no tech outfit more influential than Apple. CNET News' Erica Ogg and other reporters will attempt to make sense of the rumors, hype, products, and people that will shape the future of the company. But Apple's not the only game in town, as the established cell phone companies and others strike back against the iPhone. E-mail Erica at erica.ogg@cnet.com.

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