![]() ![]() ![]() Sunday’s NYT report claims that Eddy Cue, Apple’s senior VP for internet software and services, has informed Apple TV+ partners that “the two things we will never do are hard-core nudity and China.” See also: Courthouse News, Eugene Volokh. The court doesn’t agree that he was harassed but seems to be taking other claims seriously. Plaintiff Pham further told his supervisors that the Guo Media App does not contain violent content or incite violence does not violate any of defendant Apple’s policies and procedures regarding Apps and, therefore, it should remain on the App Store as a matter of free speech.ĭefendant Apple became aware of plaintiff Pham’s criticism and defendant Apple’s managers responded by retaliating against plaintiff Pham and ultimately terminating plaintiff Pham. Plaintiff Pham responded stating the Guo Media App publishes valid claims of corruption against the Chinese government and Chinese Communist Party and, therefore, should not be taken down. At this meeting, defendant Apple supervisors stated that the Guo Media App is critical of the Chinese government and, therefore, should be removed from the App Store. In or around late September 2018, shortly after defendant Apple provided plaintiff Pham with the DCP, plaintiff Pham was called to a meeting to discuss the Guo Media App with multiple defendant Apple supervisors and managers. Defendant Apple then performed an internal investigation and identified plaintiff Pham as the App Reviewer who approved the Guo Media App. Apple (PDF, via Llyod Chambers):Īfter plaintiff Pham approved the Guo Media App, the Chinese government contacted defendant Apple and demanded that the Guo Media App be removed from defendant Apple’s App Store. APFS to Add Case-Insensitive Variant for Macīug Cocoa Finder Mac macOS 11.0 Big Sur Programming Server Message Block (SMB) Unicodeįired App Reviewer Sues Apple Pham v.Now it seems that same code is doing unwanted conversions before the paths make it down to the lower level APIs. But that only ended up being a partial solution, the result being that some APIs never worked properly until file system support was added. This is not a surprise because, before relenting and adding Unicode normalization support to APFS, Apple tried to solve the problem in the Cocoa layer. And some of the more basic getResource accessors work as well. The NSURL’s path property does still hold the original precomposed name, and if I get the path and pass it to a POSIX function, it works. Other higher-level functions fail as well, such as trying to open the item with. For instance, getting NSURLCanonicalPathKey fails, even in macOS 11.1. However, when I use NSURL operations, some work and others give me a -260 error. Now, I can nicely access files in such a folder from macOS, as long as I only use POSIX functions (which includes the shells such as bash and zsh). So, if a user on a Linux system creates a folder that contains an Umlaut such as “ü”, it’ll end up precomposed on the (ext4) file system. ![]()
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