Apple blocked MAX on iPhone and a dumb update button bricked it completely
Oh, the sweet smell of digital iron curtains and developer oversight. When Apple kicked the Russian messenger MAX off the App Store, things got messy. But the real clown show started when the app tried to force a non-existent update.
The trouble began right after Apple cleaned up its digital storefront to comply with sanctions, vaporizing the MAX messenger from the App Store. For a normal app, this would just mean no new downloads. But the masterminds behind MAX had left a mandatory update trigger hardcoded in the older versions, leaving existing users trapped in a digital purgatory.
When users open the app, they are greeted by an unskippable "Update" prompt. Clicking it redirects to a non-existent App Store page, rendering the app completely useless. While the developers' official PR channel scrambled to call the screenshots "fake news" and insisted everything is fine, users are locked out.
To top it off, those lucky few who didn't get the update loop are dealing with a silent treatment. Since the app is banned, Apple revoked the server tokens, killing all push notifications on iOS. The official, highly professional advice from the support team is to literally open the app more often manually to check if anyone has texted.
It takes a special kind of corporate genius to let a self-destruct button slip into production right before a predictable ban. Now millions of users are left staring at a dead icon, proving once again that when geopolitics meets lazy coding, the user always loses.
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