After a period of uncertainty, Apple has made it clear that it has crippled Progressive Web Apps in iOS 17.4 in the EU in the name of security and privacy. When the first iOS 17.4 beta launched, ...
Pushback towards the plan to disable web apps: Apple’s decision to disable web apps faced criticism, with the Open Web Advocacy, a nonprofit organization advocating for the open web, writing an open ...
Back in mid-February, Apple announced that iOS 17.4 would remove support for progressive web apps in the EU. The company blamed this on the EU's Digital Markets Act (DMA), which goes into effect next ...
Some European lawmakers allege that Apple is shirking its responsibility to comply with the Digital Markets Act by removing Progressive Web Apps — and are preparing to launch an investigation. In ...
Roula Khalaf, Editor of the FT, selects her favourite stories in this weekly newsletter. Apple has reversed course on a plan to cut off access to applications that bypass its app store, which the ...
Posts from this topic will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. As Apple prepares to comply with the Digital Markets Act, the company seems to be disabling an alternate way of ...
Well, it turns out it’s not a bug that broke iPhone web apps, also known as progressive web apps (PWAs), in the EU. Following developer complaints and press reports about how PWAs were no longer ...
There's a new version of the Apple App Store on the web, but this one is mostly for just looking at apps, at least for now.