Apple removes ICEBlock from the App Store after Trump administration’s demand

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By Daved Worner

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Apple has removed the Ibslock, allowing users to keep a PIN on a map to show where Ice agents were recently spotted from the App Store. It also pulled other applications that work for similar purposes. Accordingly Fox businessAttorney General Palm Bondie claimed to them on Techtown and informed Apple that apps were “designed to risk ICE agents simply for their work.” Bondi added that “violence against law enforcement is an unbearable red line that cannot be overcome.” He also said that “the judiciary will continue to make every effort to protect [its] Bared Federal law enforcement officials who are at risk of their lives every day to protect Americans. “

“We have created the App Store as a safe and trusted place to discover apps,” Apple said in a statement in a statement. “We have removed it and similar applications from the App Store based on information from law enforcement about the risk related to the Ibellok.”

Bondie demanded the removal of apps after the FBI, and the administration said that the gunmen who were attacked at an ice facility in Dalla used the tracking apps with the Iloking Apps to shoot from the roof. The gunman killed two immigrants and was injured in the third, but he aimed at Ice Agents. The app developer Joshua Aaron said Fox business By the way he was “incredibly disappointed” by Apple’s activities. “It is never the right step to assume an authoritarian rule,” he said. “Apple has claimed that they have received information from law enforcement that Ibelok has worked to harm law enforcement officers. It is obviously false.” Aaron further added: “We are promised to fight what we have to fight. This administration has always continued to rule the people of this nation to protect our neighbors from terrorism.”

The Ibslock rose to the top of the App Store Chart in July, after the administration officials rebuked it, made more people aware of its existence. At that time, the officials warned Aaron that they were “looking at him and he was looking at him better” because the app threatened the lives of law enforcement agents. NBC News It has been downloaded more than 1 million times since it was launched. The administration’s “Border Jazer” Tom Homan recently stated Fox News The government will investigate the “these applications imposed people” because they “have put law enforcement at great risk”.

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