4don MSN
Longtime Apple executive Phil Schiller on Monday conceded he initially opposed fees that the iPhone maker charges for in app-transactions processed outside its own payment system because he feared violating a court-ordered mandate designed to create more competition.
Apple, parents
· 21h
Apple revamps account setup for kids and adds new App Store safeguards
· 23h · on MSN
Apple will let parents share their kids’ ages to limit app access
Apple will let parents share kids’ age and revamp ratings to protect them
Apple will make it easier for parents to set up child accounts, revise their age, and share an age range to protect children from bad content.The Latest Tech News, Delivered to Your Inbox
It isn’t often that Apple releases a new app in February, but recently the app “Apple Invites” popped up in the App Store. Apple Invites allows users to create and
Revenge thriller and first-person arcade shooter I Am Your Beast is now available for iOS via App Store, developer Strange Scaffold announced. The beginning can be played for free, while the full
Two Apple executives and three other senior Apple employees are expected to testify in California federal court next week, as a judge reconvenes a hearing into claims that the iPhone maker violated her order to allow more competition in its lucrative App Store.
Apple Fellow Phil Schiller testified in court on Monday that he initially opposed the 27% commission Apple now charges on purchases made outside
Apple executive Phil Schiller admitted in court that the 27 percent fee Apple imposed likely violated a court order in Epic v. Apple.
The Brazilian antitrust regulator has been investigating Apple for imposing anti-competitive terms and conditions on the App Store. Although
Apple is introducing new child-safety measures that affect how the accounts of minors are set up and what they can see across the App Store. The changes, detailed in a "Helping Protect Kids Online" white paper on Apple's developer website,
The impact on Apple Inc.’s bottom line was a key part of its decision to charge developers a 27% fee to steer customers outside the App Store, even if it risked defying a court order, a company executive told a judge.
Apple Inc. believed there was a “significant” risk it would fail to comply with a court order to allow mobile app developers to steer customers to payment methods outside the company’s App Store when it added a new commission for those purchases,
Some results have been hidden because they may be inaccessible to you
Show inaccessible results