Apple removed an app that archives videos of ICE arrests

Apple has removed Eyes Up, an app that collects and archives videos of Immigration Customs and Enforcement arrests, 404 Media reports. The app's removal follows similar action taken against ICEBlock last week, an app that tracks ICE activity in an attempt to offer real-time alerts of when and where arrests are happening. Unlike ICEBlock, though, Eyes Up's main purpose is to serve as an archive, not a tool for eluding government agents.

The app, which is still available via the web and the Google Play Store, archives videos of ICE arrests from a variety of different sources, and plots them on an interactive map. Users can submit their own videos for inclusion, and tap or click on individual map pins to view videos and download them for later use. "Our goal is government accountability, we aren’t even doing real-time tracking," an Eyes Up administrator told 404 Media. Ultimately, saved videos could prove useful in court, especially in response to possible ICE misconduct.

Apple says it removed Eyes Up because it violated the company's policy around "objectionable content," according to the report, and because it received information from law enforcement that the app is used "to provide location information about law enforcement officers that can be used to harm such officers individually or as a group."

Engadget has contacted Apple for more information on Eyes Up's removal from the App Store. We'll update this article if we hear back.

Apple reportedly received similar information to spur the removal of ICEBlock from the App Store, including a direct request from Attorney General Pam Bondi, Fox Business reports. The fact that Eyes Up was also removed suggests that Apple is casting a wider net than just banning apps that help pinpoint the location of ICE activity.

Google has been removing similar apps on the Play Store, too. The company pulled an app called Red Dot that also plotted ICE activity on a map, one of several apps that were removed because they shared the location of a "vulnerable group."

This article originally appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/apps/apple-removed-an-app-that-archives-videos-of-ice-arrests-212946540.html?src=rss

Read more @ Engadget

Latest posts

The Polestar 4 takes EV minimalism to the next level

Since the launch of its Polestar 2 sedan in 2021, Swedish EV company Polestar has launched two additional models: the spacious 3 compact crossover...

How to generate AI images using ChatGPT

Since March of this year, it's been possible to generate images directly within ChatGPT. Following a period where it briefly wasn't available to free...

The AI-native generation is coming, are you ready?

The UK government is going all in on AI literacy. From primary school to postgraduate study, the plan is to create a pipeline of...

5 ways to make Gemini your everyday AI art teacher

I peaked artistically at stick figures and the kind of doodles that suggested I never looked at the paper while I drew them. I've...

Google Cloud is making its AI Agent Builder much smarter and faster to deploy

Developers can now build AI agents that ‘self-heal’ with Google CloudGo has been added to the list of supported programming languagesDashboards improve observability and...

GTA 6 has been delayed once again to ‘finish the game with the level of polish you have come to expect and deserve’, though...

Take-Two CEO Strauss Zelnick has spoken to IGN following the latest Grand Theft Auto 6 delayGTA 6 will now release on November 19, 2026Zelnick...

The iPhone Air 2 could fix its predecessor’s biggest issue

The iPhone Air 2 might have two rear camerasThis second snapper would apparently be an ultra-wide, but Apple is only said to be considering...

NymVPN boosts its censorship-unlocking power with new features

NymVPN adds QUIC support to better evade network-level blockingA new 'Stealth API Connect' feature has also been introducedThe update also adds more specific US...

Netflix releases first five minutes of Stranger Things season 5 – and it answers a big question about Will Byers from season 1

Netflix has released the opening scene of Stranger Things season 5 episode 1It answers a big question about Will Byers from the show's debut...

Amazon is rolling out the UK’s biggest fleet of electric vehicles

Amazon now runs a fleet of 160 eHGVs, including Mercedes eActros trucks, in the UKA further 800 Mercedes eSprinter vans have been put on...