Apple Warns Developers Against Adding Geo Spam To Their Apps
washingtonpost.com
Erick Schonfeld
TechCrunch.com
Friday, February 5, 2010; 4:36 AM
A couple days ago, Apple put iPhone developers on notice that location-aware ads
will no longer be allowed in all apps. Some observers read this as a blanket
prohibition, and noted that it looks like Apple might be reserving geo ads for
itself through its acquisition of Quattro Wireless.
But the notice itself only seems to ban location-based advertising from
non-location-based apps.
Here's what the notice on Apple's Dev Center says:
If you build your application with features based on a user's location, make
sure these features provide beneficial information. If your app uses
location-based information primarily to enable mobile advertisers to deliver
targeted ads based on a user's location, your app will be returned to you by the
App Store Review Team for modification before it can be posted to the App Store.
We'll see how liberally Apple chooses to apply this new guideline, but the
language does not ban all geo ads. It only bans geo spam. If an app does not
have a geo component as one of its core features, it can't serve up irrelevant
geo-targeted ads. This seems like a policy aimed to avoid random geo-targeted
ads from popping up in games or other apps that try to enable the core location
feature for ads and nothing else.
Geo-based ads are very promising, and could open up local advertising to the Web
in an entirely new way. But Apple needs to set the rules of the road early to
make sure that consumers are not inundated with ads that are nothing more than
spam and out of context to what they are doing. If you are an iPhone developer
whose app was sent back for this reason, please share your experience in
comments.