Apple’s app store shows we can be fine with digital zones that ditch the myth of free expression.
The internet’s most censored space |
| Dae In Chung |
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For the free-speech absolutists out there, let me point you to a corner of the digital world that embraces its utter lack of free expression: Apple’s app stores. |
There are dangers to apps being subject to Apple’s whims. But the success of the app storefronts — and online hangouts like Snapchat that also don’t pretend to be anything-goes havens of freedom — show that the public sometimes embraces companies dictating what people can say and do inside their virtual walls. You — yes, you! — are probably not universally against digital censorship. |
From the day the iPhone app store opened, employees reviewed and tested apps before making them available to the public. The vetting gave people confidence that apps were safe and worthy of their consideration. Google’s Android storefront also screens apps, but is generally more permissive. Apple said last year that it reviewed 100,000 apps weekly and rejected about 40 percent. |
There are downsides to Apple’s absolute app authority. In China, Apple’s control at times has enabled the government to block apps it believes break its laws. That has included some news apps, including The New York Times. |
In addition, app makers gripe about the process, the reasons for rejections, as well as the fees Apple charges for apps on the store. They also question whether Apple shuts out their apps or makes them harder to find because the company wants to help its own apps or internet services. The makers of a new email service, which my colleague Brian X. Chen reviewed, are furious about what they say are Apple’s capricious reasons for blocking the app. |
European regulators are investigating whether Apple’s terms go too far, my Times colleagues reported this week. Apple has said it worked to make people trust the app store and offer app makers a good business opportunity. The company said there was no basis to complaints that it was violating European competition laws. |
But few credible people say that Apple should let anyone and anything into its app stores, at least in the way that some people argue for a Wild West on social media. The fight we’re having — appropriately — is over the terms of Apple’s censorship zones. (The freewheeling internet gives Apple some cover here.) |
It’s time to stop debating whether we want powerful gatekeepers vetting information. We do. We don’t want people to be able to shout the proverbial “fire” in a crowded theater, and we don’t want terrorists, stalkers, dangerous conspiracy theorists and authoritarians to have free rein on the internet. |
Let’s move past simplistic free-speech arguments. The real debate is how we make sure that powerful gatekeepers exercise their authority effectively, fairly and with accountability. |
Most Facebook garbage is free of charge |
I promise you that I love to argue. But I confess that I’m a little bored arguing about political advertising on Facebook. It feels as if we’re fighting too much about the wrong thing. (This, perhaps, is the theme of today’s newsletter.) |
If you have been alive and conscious for the last … forever … you might have noticed that politicians twist or ignore the truth when they pitch themselves to voters. |
This has become a much bigger problem in the social media age. Lies can travel farther and faster than ever before. |
Now, my colleague Mike Isaac reported, Facebook will start giving people the option to hide from their feeds political ads, commercials about social issues and similar paid messages. It’s a mushy middle ground that, I assure you, will satisfy no one. |
Political ads are important because they represent what a candidate most wants voters to know. And it’s fair to say that internet companies shouldn’t financially benefit from false advertisements. |
But we also can’t lose sight that most of the garbage-fire parts of Facebook are not paid political messages. |
So, yes, we should be debating how Facebook — and political candidates — should best keep voters informed. But let’s not forget about all the noxious online speech and lies that are free of charge. |
- Taking a company public is just strange now: My colleague Erin Griffith relays how the coronavirus is warping the usual public spectacle of initial public offerings. Instead of C.E.O.s traveling the world to pitch their companies, one crammed back-to-back virtual meetings from his home — and made sure to dress up and wear shoes. Instead of the typical ceremonial bell ringing at a stock exchange, employees of one company uploaded photos of themselves for display at the Nasdaq video screen.
- The existential question for internet marketplaces: Bookshop has been billed as the anti-Amazon — a place for people to buy books online and still support the shop around the corner. But some bookstore owners fear that Bookshop is another way to lose revenue and reader loyalty to an internet middleman, my colleague Alexandra Alter writes.
- A glimpse at the humiliation for black executives in technology: Bloomberg News writes about the challenges black people face when they start a tech company or run one. Some executives are advised to bring a white colleague with them to business meetings. One black chief executive told Bloomberg that he carried around a notebook with the logo of alma mater, Stanford University, to try to fit in.
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I am a sucker for red pandas. Their adorableness is too much. (Stick around through the end of the video to watch Lin get a birthday “cake” of apples and bananas.) |
We want to hear from you. Tell us what you think of this newsletter and what else you’d like us to explore. You can reach us at ontech@nytimes.com. |
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