Apple cracks down on unsanctioned use of its emoji designs in third-party apps

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in iPhone
Apple appears to be taking a harder stance against developers using its custom emoji font, known as Apple Color Emoji, even in the case of apps that have been using the art for years.

One rejected app, BitTracker. | Image Credit: Emojipedia
One rejected app, BitTracker. | Image Credit: Emojipedia


Business messaging app Slack used Apple emoji across all platforms until Tuesday, and Facebook's WhatsApp only recently switched to a custom emoji set on Android, according to Emojipedia. Apple is taking some iOS apps to task, rejecting titles from the App Store if they use its emoji in logos, buttons, stickers, and some other forms of content outside of any text entry fields that rely on the native iOS keyboard.

Gray areas include things like notifications, custom emoji keyboards, and non-interactive text. In the latter case, App Store reviewers are said to be inconsistent in their rejections.

While emoji is typically tied to Unicode -- meaning that a smiley typed on an iPhone will still appear as a smiley on a Mac, Android phone, or Windows PC -- different platforms have different renderings. Apple is turning away iOS apps for breaking trademarks and copyrights.

Apple has increasingly made emoji a centerpiece of app updates, and even hardware, thanks to support for "animoji" on the iPhone X. This spring's iOS 11.3 update will add four new animoji: a dragon, a bear, a skull, and a lion.

Comments

  • Reply 1 of 1
    Professional graphics designers have known for years that you need to license and pay for every font and every graphic.  Most fonts and graphics now have specific pricing for including these in 'apps'.  By Apple ignoring people stealing their own assets they also were stealing from many other vendors who would otherwise sell/license these type of assets to the developers.  

    So cheers - well done Apple. 
    watto_cobra
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