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Blog - Amplify your voice

Tuesday, March 9, 2010 at 10:52:00 PM EST

If you look on any campus in the country you are bound to see students walking around with little white ear buds in their ears. In the age of mp3 players iPod is king. It provides the soundtrack to our daily lives as students. Even with less expensive choices for music players, iPods easily provide the most popular and aesthetically pleasing devise. iPod users brand loyalty to Apple goes far beyond just buying an iPod.  Consumers also dress their devices in colorful accessories, and download songs and applications from the iTunes and App stores.

Several weeks ago Apple decided that is was going to start regulating some of its Applications for the iTouch and iPhone. The change comes as concerned individuals have voiced their opinions about the sexual lewdness of certain iPod apps. While some applications have minor sexual overtones, some apps are nothing short of pornography.

Apple has responded by removing several hundred apps, and in the shuffle of doing so has deleted certain apps that were not inappropriate while failing to delete pornographic ones.  In the coming months the App Store hopes to create a explicit section to attract interested adult consumers.

Because Apple is becoming such a wide used product they have a real responsibility with the regulation of their applications. After recently reading an article in the San Fransisco Chronicle by Carol Queen, a cultural sexologist, I began to better understand the importance of this matter. Queen explains that everyone "has a right to sexuality" as well as sexual entertainment when that person is of age. It is in our nature to be interested in sex, so should Apple really hide it behind a barrier? The answer, I believe, lies in better regulation of the app store. Apps that clearly demonstrate pornographic purposes should be moved to a section specifically for pornography. Apps with minor sexual overtones should not be labeled explicit, and kept in with the other apps.

Apple has a huge responsibility here, and hopefully there going to make the right move. Sexuality is unfortunately stigmatized in cases like this, but hopefully will prevail. Adults who wish to enjoy adult entertainment and explore their sexuality have every right to do so.

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Comments
Woah this is really neat, I never thought of Apple's App Store this way.  I totally see your point and it is important that Apple does not censore peoples right to sexual content.  Sexual content does not mean porn...sexual health apps for instance are great on the iPhone and should not be removed. I should add the the app "Safari"-the web browser on the iPhone-is fully capable of going to adult websites and people will always be able to look at porn, or Amplify, on the iPhone.  Great post-this is really interesting.   
# Posted By  dandaman6007 | 3/10/10 09:52 PM | Report | Reply