Apple, one day after pulling the controversial "Baby Shaker" application from the App Store, issued a formal apology. The fervor darkens what was otherwise a bright week for Apple, with the company posting its best-ever results for a non-holiday fiscal quarter, including the shipment of 3.7 million iPhones.
Apple
issued an apology for its "Baby Shaker" App, in which users could "shake" a
virtual infant using the iPhone, a day after removing the controversial
application from the App Store.
"This application was deeply offensive and should not have been approved for
distribution on the App Store," Natalie Kerris, a spokesperson for Apple, said
in an April 23 statement. "When we learned of this mistake, the app was removed
immediately. We sincerely apologize for this mistake and thank our customers
for bringing this to our attention."
Despite removing the 99-cent "Baby Shaker" application from the App
Store, which had originally been posted on April 20, calls for an apology from
the company had continued unabated.
Apple has pulled Apps before, usually offering a reason to support the decision.
A clause in the iPhone SDK agreement states that "Applications must not contain
any obscene, pornographic, offensive or defamatory content or materials of any
kind."
Resource Library:
"Baby Shaker" developer Sikalosoft also produces another application for the
iPhone, Dice Mosaic, which renders photos into black-and-white mosaics.
On April 22, Apple announced the companys best-ever results for a
non-holiday fiscal quarter, with shipments of 2.2 million Macs, 11.01 million
iPods, and 3.7 million iPhones in the quarter.