Apple Took Down These ICE-Tracking Apps. The Developers Aren't Giving Up [View all]
We are going to do everything in our power to fight this, says ICEBlock developer Joshua Aaron after Apple removed his app from the App Store.
https://archive.ph/sblRm#selection-691.0-691.144
https://www.wired.com/story/apple-took-down-ice-tracking-apps-their-developers-arent-giving-up/
The developer behind Eyes Up, one of the many Immigration and Customs Enforcement-related apps removed by Apple in recent days, was busy on Wednesday evening at a local planning session for the nationwide No Kings protest, scheduled for later this month. When WIRED eventually reached him by phone, he asked to be only identified by his first name, Mark, for safety reasons. The administration will act on their grudges, he says. And they are not afraid to do so, frequently.
He should know.
Marks app, a platform built to serve as a repository for videos and other materials documenting ICE activity, is not alone in getting kicked off Apples App Store. Earlier in October, ICEBlock was among the first ICE-related apps Apple removed. The decision followed claims from US attorney general Pam Bondi that such tools endanger ICE officers. Apple has also removed other tracking appsincluding Red Dot and DEICERas well as Eyes Up.
Like Mark, ICEBlocks developer, Joshua Aaron, is determined to reverse the app store bans. While I cannot speak to specifics right now, I can tell you that ICEBlock has an incredible legal team behind it and we are going to do everything in our power to fight this, Aaron tells WIRED.
snip
Legal experts WIRED spoke with say that the ICE monitoring and documentation apps that Apple has removed from its App Store are clear examples of protected speech under the US Constitutions First Amendment. These apps are publishing constitutionally protected speech. They're publishing truthful information about matters of public interest that people obtained just by witnessing public events, says David Greene, a civil liberties director at the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
Or, as a certain Usonian emailed Mr. Tim Cook:
Do not obey in advance
Historian Timothy Snyders first lesson in his book On Tyranny is Do not obey in advance. To obey a tyrant before you are compelled to do so teaches them what they will be able to get you to do, easily, without even needing to expend the resources and energy it takes to carry out that part of their agenda.
Memes?

