The Indicator from Planet Money - How Apple's market power blocked ICEBlock
Episode Date: November 4, 2025Last month, the Trump administration asked Apple to remove an app from its App Store that crowdsourced sightings of Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents. Today on the show, we explain what an on...going legal battle involving the developer of the video game Fortnite has to do with Apple’s latest move to comply with the Trump administration.Related episodes: How Fortnite brought Google to its kneesThe DOJ's case against AppleApple v EverybodyFor sponsor-free episodes of The Indicator from Planet Money, subscribe to Planet Money+ via Apple Podcasts or at plus.npr.org. Fact-checking by Sierra Juarez. Music by Drop Electric. Find us: TikTok, Instagram, Facebook, Newsletter.See pcm.adswizz.com for information about our collection and use of personal data for sponsorship and to manage your podcast sponsorship preferences.NPR Privacy Policy
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NPR.
This is the indicator from Planet Money.
I'm Waylon Wong.
And I'm Darian Woods.
It's becoming a familiar site in Chicago
in its neighboring suburbs.
Residents and bystanders,
spot-masked and armed agents
that look like they're part
of the federal government's deportation campaign there.
That's led by U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement or ICE.
Neighborhood residents honked their car horns
when they see agents.
They blow whistles.
They film video on their phones.
They text each other and call in tips to local immigration advocacy groups.
This activity is hard to escape.
I live in a Chicago suburb, and I've seen helicopters circling overhead, and my social media
groups are blowing up.
And it's not just Chicago.
Agents from ICE and U.S. Customs and Border Protection are also carrying out immigration
enforcement in cities like Los Angeles and Portland, Oregon.
And a lot of residents are using their phones to document and report sightings of agents.
But the federal government is going after major technical.
platforms that facilitate these alerts. It asked Facebook to suspend a group called
Ice Siting Chicagoland that had almost 80,000 members. And it asked Apple to remove an ice
spotting mobile app from its platform. Today on the show, we talked to the developer behind
that Apple app, and we'd learn what the government crackdown on these tech tools has to do with
the ongoing legal battle over Apple's power in mobile apps. Joshua Aaron caught the tech
bug early. He learned its first computer language at an after-school program in fourth grade.
When he was 13, he wrote a blackjack program on an Apple computer. Later on, he got certified
as a desktop technician for the company. I love their operating system. Their devices are
phenomenal. I happen to love their products. Fast forward to 2024 and the presidential election.
Joshua was alarmed at what he read in Project 2025. That's the conservative policy document that
provided a roadmap for what a Trump presidency might look like. And on the election night,
My brain started going a mile a minute. And, you know, what can I do? I have to do something.
Joshua focused his energy on immigration. Project 2025 had talked about mass deportations and heightened
enforcement. As an Apple guy, he decided to make an iPhone app that would let people report ice sightings.
It would be similar to how people who use Ways or Google Maps for navigation can report construction or state
troopers on the side of the highway. Joshua started coding his iPhone app in January. He wanted to make
something so simple that anyone could use it, regardless of age or tech-saviness. And he called it
IceBlock. So here's what the app looks like. The main screen has a map. Below the map is a list of
reported sightings within a five-mile radius of the user's location. Someone can make their own report by
tapping the map. That's about it. It's free. Joshua says IceBlock doesn't collect or store any
information about its users, and it doesn't ask for an email address or solicit donations.
It's a crowdsourced early warning system. So there's not a million bells and whistles or
funky looking buttons or how do I do this and how do I manage that. It needed to be incredibly
fast, incredibly stable and incredibly simplistic. And that was the design. Joshua submitted
ice block to Apple for approval. He says there was some back and forth with the company, and ultimately
the only change he had to make was tweaking permissions for using someone's location.
He says Apple never objected to the app's fundamental purpose of reporting ice sightings.
I had multiple conversations, you know, video calls, messages, all that kind of stuff.
They said, we get it. It's fine. You know, this is obviously protected speech for the First Amendment.
You're not doing anything nefarious. Iceblock launched in the App Store in early April.
Joshua says only a few thousand people were using it at first. It wasn't.
enough to generate meaningful reports.
And this was before ICE activity ramped up in Los Angeles, Portland, and Chicago.
But then in June, CNN reported on ICE Block.
And White House Press Secretary Caroline Levitt was asked about the CNN story in a briefing.
But certainly it's unacceptable that a major network would promote such an app that is encouraging
violence against law enforcement officers who are trying to keep our country safe.
The political rhetoric escalated from there.
The acting director of ICE releases a statement about it. Pam Bondi's on Hannity threatening me
and Christy Noam's talking about it. And we go from 3,000 users to 25,000 users to 85,000 users to 200,000
users. And when Apple removed it, we had 1.14 million users.
Attorney General Pam Bondi asked Apple to take down ice block in October. And Joshua says he got a
message from Apple. It said the company had received information that the app
was targeting law enforcement offices. It didn't elaborate further. Now, anyone who had downloaded
the app earlier could still use it, but Iceblock was gone from the app store.
They cited objectionable content and their guideline 1.1.1, which basically says you can't have hate speech
or target an individual or group. We reached out to the Department of Homeland Security.
Assistant Secretary Trisha McLaughlin said in a statement that the media is spinning
Apple's removal of ice tracking apps as, quote, caving to pressure instead of preventing
further bloodshed and stopping law enforcement from getting killed.
We asked Apple for comment via email and registered letter. We did not hear back. The company
did say in October that it removed ice block and similar apps based on information and received
from law enforcement about safety risks. Joshua believes there are two things at risk here.
Neither is about the safety of officers. One is free speech. The other is a competitive market
for iOS apps.
There's just one app store.
And for Joshua, who is an iOS developer,
that means he doesn't have another way
to get Iceblock into the world.
He likes Apple security features.
He didn't make an Android version of his app.
iOS and Android roughly split the US market for smartphones.
When you allow a corporation to decide
what you can and cannot use on a device
that you paid for and you own,
that's a problem.
We had a tool that over a million people were using every single day.
And because Apple decided that they were going to remove it, now nobody can have it and
nobody can install it on any iOS device.
An alternate marketplace for iOS apps does not exist in the U.S.
But does that make Apple's app store an illegal monopoly?
This was the question at the heart of a huge years-long legal battle between Apple and Epic games.
Epic makes the blockbuster game Fortnite, and its main grievance is that in-app purchases had to go through Apple's payment system.
Apple typically takes a 30% cut of those sales.
A federal judge delivered a split ruling in the case in 2021.
She ordered Apple to allow other payment options, but upheld the overall structure of the app store as legal.
In Europe, regulators have taken a firmer hand.
Users there can get iPhone apps from alternative marketplace.
but not in the U.S.
Rebecca Ellensworth is a law professor at Vanderbilt University who studies antitrust.
She says Iceblock is an example of Apple's market power in the U.S.
If there was just a bigger market, a more competitive market for apps,
then you could have this app appear in stores,
could be downloaded and used in ways that Apple wouldn't have the same power to totally take away.
Rebecca also points out a number of sensitive areas for Apple's relationship with the Trump administration.
There's tariffs, for example, and the Justice Department has its own pending antitrust case against Apple over whether the company blocks certain kinds of apps and services.
Rebecca says these were probably considerations for Apple when the administration asked the company to take ICE Block off the app store.
It could have fought the government.
I mean, it could have just said no.
Now, I think that to say that as if it was going to be consequence free for Apple is naive.
Meanwhile, the Epic v. Apple battle continues in a first.
literal appeals court. And Joshua Aaron says he's going to fight Apple in court too.
This episode was produced by Corey Bridges with engineering by Koh Takasuki Chernivin and
Kwayzee. It was fact-checked by Sierra Juarez. Kikin Canon edits the show and The Indicator
is a production of NPR.
