Apple shuns the tech industry's apology tour
It has always been one of the more high-minded of the big tech
companies
Technology News: Sorry, Apple’s not sorry. There has been a theme at the tech
industry’s big conferences this year: Facebook and other tech giants keep
telling us that they’ve learned from their mistakes and are going to be a lot
more thoughtful about the far-out stuff they plan on doing in the future.
Apple has been cool to this narrative, and it
was striking how the company’s executives danced around the tech backlash story
line from the stage on Monday at its annual conference for developers.
Though Apple acknowledged the darker
side of society’s obsession with the digital world, it didn’t go anywhere near
the idea that its own technology might bear any of the
blame.
Apple did announce several new ways of
letting adults and children limit how much time they spend on their phones. A
tool called Screen Time, for example, is meant to help iPhone customers manage the time
they spend on their devices. You can also add limits to how much you use
certain apps. And parents will be able to use Screen Time to place limits on
how their children use their iPhones.
Apple’s software chief, Craig Federighi, said the company
felt it was time to address smartphones’ oversize impact on everyday life. “For
some of us, it’s become such a habit we might not even recognise how distracted
we’ve become,” he said.
These features looked quite
handy — we will know for sure once they’re released to users this year. If they
do push users to quit wasting so much time on Facebook and YouTube (where getting people to waste time is a big part of
the business plan), they are sure to roil Apple’s relationship with others in tech.
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