Apple picked a truly embarrassing time to wrongly reject a simple app update ((Sean Hollister)/The Verge)

Illustration by Alex Castro / The Verge

Apple has a rocky relationship with some iOS developers because of its
seemingly arbitrary decisions over what gets published and when — and
now, because of a dumb miss, it’s being accused of putting profits ahead
of human rights in Myanmar by the founder of ProtonMail and ProtonVPN,
even though that’s probably not what happened.

Proton founder Andy Yen writes that Apple blocked an important security
update to the company’s privacy-protecting ProtonVPN software simply
because Apple didn’t like the app’s description, specifically this line:

Whether it is challenging governments, educating the public, or training journalists, we have a long history of helping bring online freedom to more people around the world. …

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