Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Google Android Programming

Google Asks Android Developers To Show Sensitivity To Disasters and Atrocity 96

Mark Wilson writes: Today Google revealed an updated version of its Google Play Developer Program Policies. There aren't actually all that many changes or additions, but those that are present are quite interesting. Google is clamping down on the problem of impersonation, making it clearer that it is not permissible to mislead users by imitating other apps, making false claims, or suggesting endorsements that do not exist. One of the more intriguing changes to the document sees Google calling on developers to show sensitivity to evens such as natural disasters, war, and death. Any apps or other content that attempt to benefit by exploiting such events are explicitly banned.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Google Asks Android Developers To Show Sensitivity To Disasters and Atrocity

Comments Filter:
  • ...punch the-equiavlent-of-bin-laden apps?

    Based on the amount of anti-bin-laden crap that was around the office after Sept 11, there's clearly a market for anti-bogeyman propaganda.
  • maybe i'm behind the news curve but...

    is it still the case that a lonely developer can release an app he or she slaved over lovingly for months, only to see it ripped off and released by someone else who games the ranking system and reaps all the profits?

    that seems to be the real threat to their app ecosystem

    https://play.google.com/about/... [google.com]

    Intellectual Property: Don’t infringe on the intellectual property rights of others, (including patent, trademark, trade secret, copyright, and other proprietary rights), or encourage or induce infringement of intellectual property rights. We will respond to clear notices of alleged copyright infringement. For more information or to file a DMCA request, please visit our copyright procedures.

    doesn't seem strong enough to me

  • Taking down games because they have confederates, represented by their flag? Fail

    Taking down games or apps which are clearly intended to be hateful, I'm not sure I even have an example probably because I've never gone looking for them... a confederate flag app that drops the n-bomb when you rub the stars the right way? dunno what an example would be. But OK, I can see that.

    So where's the line? Is it just going to be wishy-washy and wander all over? We don't need Google to help with that.

    • by narcc ( 412956 )

      a confederate flag app that drops the n-bomb when you rub the stars the right way?

      Conservative porn is still porn. That wouldn't be allowed in the Play store.

    • by WaffleMonster ( 969671 ) on Thursday June 25, 2015 @11:19PM (#49992375)

      Taking down games or apps which are clearly intended to be hateful, I'm not sure I even have an example probably because I've never gone looking for them... a confederate flag app that drops the n-bomb when you rub the stars the right way? dunno what an example would be. But OK, I can see that.

      Sticks and stones. Freedom isn't about agreeing with nice people.

      • Sticks and stones. Freedom isn't about agreeing with nice people.

        Right, it's about being able to do business with who you choose, and not who you don't. Oh wait, is that a different narrative? Silly me. I think Google has an absolute right to kick whatever they want off their app store. I think they're stupid dicks if they kick stuff off on the basis that its success is predicated upon the suffering of others, because down that road lies... nothing. But they're a public company subjected to massive scrutiny everywhere in the world, so I understand that they have some unf

  • At least Google isn't having a knee jerk overreaction like Apple banning Civil War games because they have a friggin Confederate flag in them.

  • Slashdot beta isn't so bad after all.

  • Google Asks Android Developers To Show Sensitivity To Disasters and Atrocity

    lol! iphone, eat this!

  • "Google calling on developers to show sensitivity to evens". Odds need sensitivity too.
  • Foolishness (Score:2, Informative)

    They'll probably use this to ban some app that's helping to get materials and supplies into disaster areas using the pricing mechanism. Whenever a disaster happens, demand for goods skyrockets past supply, prices rise to guide allocation and outsiders desire to risk capital and safety to get supplies in, seeking profit. Then State actors castigate them, threaten to imprison them (dog-whistle: "price gougers"), and so the supply dries up again. Every economist recognizes how this works, but politicians s

    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by enigma32 ( 128601 )

      I thought Google was smarter, though.

      They did just censor search results for merchandise branded with a particular logo that has a negative connotation for most enlightened humans, despite the fact that other merchandise branded with similarly offensive logos is still easily found through them.

      I'm beginning to lose a lot of faith in Google. I think the business idiots have run the engineers out of there.

      • They did just censor search results for merchandise branded with a particular logo that has a negative connotation for most enlightened humans

        What, they decided to censor Civil War games too?

  • Uber usually turns off surge pricing in extreme situations. Say they didn't for some occasion - will Google kick them off?

  • Disasters and atrocity... exactly describes Android Lollipop on Nexus 7.

    They can fucking prescribe sensitivity when they stop rendering perfectly good customer owned equipment nearly unusable. How could they ever have released such a miserable crock of shit?

  • So pretty much all the news companies are banned?
  • My biggest complaint about Google's play store is that they do not require each app developer to explain in the app description why their app needs access to a particular data element or service on the device and what it is going to do with the access. A flash light does not need internet access or access to my contact list etc. If the app is asking for more access than I believe is necessary then I do not install it. I believe a lot of people would not install apps if they actually knew what they were doin
  • So many rules! What are you apple?

Every nonzero finite dimensional inner product space has an orthonormal basis. It makes sense, when you don't think about it.

Working...