Thursday, April 25, 2024

After Suing Apple, BlueMail Calls on Other Developers ‘Kicked Out’ of App Store to Join the Fight

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Back in October, the developers behind email app BlueMail sued Apple, alleging that the “Hide My Email” feature of “Sign in with Apple” infringes on its patented technology. The complaint [PDF] also accuses Apple of anticompetitive behavior, including removing BlueMail from the Mac App Store.

“Hide My Email” hides a user’s personal email address by substituting it with a unique, random email address when setting up an account in an app or on a website that supports “Sign in with Apple.”

Apple explains how the feature works in a support document:

A unique, random email address is created, so your personal email address isn’t shared with the app or website developer during the account setup and sign in process. This address is unique to you and the developer and follows this format: @privaterelay.appleid.com

For example, if [email protected] is your Apple ID, your unique, random email address for a given app might look like [email protected].

Any messages sent to this address by the app or website developer are automatically forwarded to your personal email address by our private email relay service. You can read and respond directly to these emails and still keep your personal address private.

After writing a public letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook, BlueMail co-founders Ben Volach and Dan Volach said that they were contacted by Apple within a few hours, but they claim that the correspondence was merely a delay tactic.

We were overjoyed when we heard back from Apple within the day – within just a few hours in fact. It seemed to share our desire for a mutual solution and we worked quickly to meet its requests, but these too were just tactics meant to delay us.

Rerouted to teams that didn’t respond for weeks, told outright that our app doesn’t run on macOS Catalina when we can prove it does, and given contradictory guidance from different teams within Apple, we found ourselves back at square one. Perhaps even worse than square one, because Apple’s legal team saw our willingness to work together as weakness and strengthened its stance against us.

Now, the Volach brothers have penned an open letter to the developer community, encouraging any developers who feel that Apple has kicked them out of the App Store or otherwise treated them unfairly to reach out to BlueMail and share their stories.

If any of that sounds familiar to you, if Apple has kicked you out of its App Store, used its developer guidelines to control your innovation, hijacked your store ranking, or (let’s be honest with each other) lied to you while it steals your technology, it’s time to talk. Even if you’re not sure you want to go through with it (because we know how scary it can be), tell us your story. We won’t share anything about you without your consent.

A lot of attention was placed on the congressional hearings in Colorado on January 17, but there are many who don’t have the standing of Sonos or Tile. Together, we will have a voice.

We want to be back on the App Store, but we also want fairness. For us. For you. For all developers. Take a stand with us and email [email protected] with your experience.

BlueMail was removed from the Mac App Store in June 2019, the same month that Apple introduced “Sign in with Apple.” In a nutshell, Apple found the app to be violating several App Store Review Guidelines, but the Volach brothers disagree and are now looking for other developers similarly situated to bolster their case.

BlueMail remains available on other platforms, including iOS and Android.

More Details: “A Call for Unity Against the Biggest Tech Company”

Tags: App Store, lawsuit
This article, “After Suing Apple, BlueMail Calls on Other Developers ‘Kicked Out’ of App Store to Join the Fight” first appeared on MacRumors.com

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