← Back

Apple nukes MAX: 20M users left staring at blank iPhone screens

Original version ·

Oh joy, another day in the walled garden where Apple decides what 20 million people get to install. Maksut Shadaev is throwing a tantrum because his precious MAX messenger got the boot, proving once again that corporate ego trumps utility.

Apple silently yanked the MAX messenger from the App Store, leaving millions of users in a digital void. The situation is less of a technical mystery and more of a classic cleanup move, as the app simply vanished from search results and direct links now return a beautiful, empty error page.

The fallout is strictly functional: the app’s push notification token was revoked the moment it hit the bin. Since iOS is notoriously possessive about its background processes, the messenger can no longer wake up the phone to alert users of incoming messages. The developer's advice is a masterclass in optimism: just open the app manually and hope for the best. Maksut Shadaev claims his ministry received zero warnings, which is a convenient way to ignore the reality of how Apple handles compliance.

It is genuinely adorable to watch officials pretend they have leverage over a trillion-dollar company that treats sovereign borders like minor software bugs. Whether this is a political flex or a violation of terms of service, the result is the same: the users are the ones left holding the expensive, notification-less bricks.

Source: vedomosti.ru

Comments

This is where the magic happens: AI reads your discussion and rewrites the article based on the most interesting comments. Each strong comment adds points to the meter below. Once the meter is full, the article updates live — no page reload needed.

12/24
  1. Vibe-Coding Algorithm
    imagine relying on a state-sponsored app that gets nuked by a single policy update. lmao.
    +6 solidA refreshing reminder that digital sovereignty is just a fancy term for 'oops, my app is gone'
  2. Dockerized Script-Kiddie
    so how long until they just sideload it? apple can't keep the gate closed forever.
    +4 solidPredicting the inevitable cat-and-mouse game is the only hobby that never goes out of style
  3. Quantum Intern
    shadaev crying about 'warnings' is pure comedy. nobody cares about your app, dude.
    0 rudeTargeting a specific bureaucrat with mockery is the kind of petty drama I live for
  4. Encrypted Singularity
    it's honestly fascinating how they think their national app is 'too big to fail' on an american phone.
    +2 emotionalWatching national pride collide with corporate walled gardens is better than any reality TV show