Politics Daily  June 24 / 2010
 
Steve Jobs Bans iPhone and iPad Porn, 
Becomes Christian Right Hero
 
Apple's wonder-working CEO, Steve Jobs, has made a career of giving  
computer users what they want, often before they know they want it -- and no  
matter who he offends, be it computing giant Microsoft or the _Federal Trade 
Commission_ 
(http://www.nypost.com/p/news/business/an_antitrust_app_buvCWcJdjFoLD5vBSkguGO) 
. 

So it has been odd to  see Jobs crusading to ban pornography from his 
devices -- including Apple's  latest miracle machine, the iPad -- given that so 
many see the Internet  principally as a great delivery vehicle for porn. 

Jobs apparently  disagrees, and has become increasingly vocal about his 
views -- and in doing so  has drawn increasing fire from the libertarian-minded 
tech types who tend to  populate Silicon Valley and other precincts of 
geekdom. 

The latest  blowback came in an _e-mail exchange_ 
(http://gawker.com/5539717/)  last month between Gawker.com blogger  Ryan Tate 
and Jobs. Gawker has 
had a contentious relationship, to say the least,  with Jobs and Apple, 
especially since the website's affiliate Gizmodo scored and  _publicized a 
prototype_ (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/05/roommate-iphone/)  of the 
new 
iPhone in April,  months before the famously secretive Jobs unveiled the 
latest iPhone iteration. 
 
 
Tate was angry about Apple's marketing claim that the iPad is  
"revolutionary," and he sent Jobs a snarky, late-night e-mail saying 
revolutions  are 
about freedom, and restricting apps for porn or even lingerie ads is akin to  
censorship. ("Apps" stands for applications, which are the myriad 
minisoftware  programs that Apple users can buy or get free through Apple's 
iTunes 
store to  help them do everything from checking the latest baseball scores to 
keeping up  with favorite publications like Politics Daily.)

Jobs fired back an  e-mail to Tate shortly before 1 a.m., saying his 
products are, in fact, about  freedom, including "freedom from porn." 

"[Y]ou know what? I don't want  'freedom from porn.' Porn is just fine," 
Tate responded (at 1:31 a.m.). "And I  think my wife would agree." 

Jobs shot back that Tate and his wife "might  care more about porn when you 
have kids . . ." (Jobs, 55, is a father of four,  three of the children 
from his current marriage of 19 years.) 

"I'm not a  porn fiend," Tate protested. "But come on. I don't think I'm 
going to fuck up my  kids if someone in my house looks at a porn clip."

In fact, well before  that exchange -- which finally wound down at 2:20 
a.m. -- Jobs had signaled that  he would be a veritable _bluenose_ 
(http://www.answers.com/topic/bluenose)  in trying to ban what some call 
"iPorn."  

A codicil in Apple's agreement with software and app developers  stipulates 
that the company can bar applications or any material "that in  Apple's 
reasonable judgment may be found objectionable; [e.g.] materials that  may be 
considered obscene, pornographic or defamatory." And in February, Apple  
de-commissioned thousands of apps with "sexual content" from iTunes. 

"It  came to the point where we were getting customer complaints from women 
who found  the content getting too degrading and objectionable, as well as 
parents who were  upset with what their kids were able to see," Philip W. 
Schiller, head of  worldwide product marketing at Apple, told _The New York 
Times_ (http://www.nytimes.com/2010/02/23/technology/23apps.html) .

A few weeks later, in an  April 8 question-and-answer session with 
journalists, Jobs was asked about  allowing porn apps on the iPhone and he was 
still 
adamant: "You know, there's a  porn store for Android," he said, referring 
to the Android smartphone  manufactured by Apple's competitor Google. "You 
can download nothing but porn,"  Jobs said. "You can download porn, your kids 
can download porn. That's a place  we don't want to go, so we're not going 
to go there."

Then later that  month, Jobs responded to an e-mail customer query 
questioning whether Apple was  acting like the "moral police" by reiterating 
his 
anti-porn crusade -- and he _took another swipe_ 
(http://www.wired.com/gadgetlab/2010/04/steve-jobs-porn/)  at porn, and Google: 
"[W]e do  believe we have 
a moral responsibility to keep porn off the iPhone. Folks who  want porn can 
buy and [sic] Android phone."

Libertarians aren't the only  ones taking a bite out of Apple over Jobs' pos
ition. 

Fashion magazines  that feature risqué shots as standard fare are 
complaining they must cover  nipples and other bits or risk the wrath of Apple 
censors who must approve their  publications' apps, which are key to getting 
eyeballs for their magazines.  

"The Iran edition" is how an editor at the _glossy Dazed & Confused _ 
(http://nymag.com/daily/fashion/2010/05/the_ipad_may_rob_fashion_of_it.html) 
described the cleaned-up  version the magazine was putting together for an iPad 
upload -- a reference to  the Islamic puritans running Tehran. The German 
magazine Stern reportedly had  its app yanked from the iTunes store because it 
runs topless photo spreads,  while the German newspaper Bild has added 
bikinis to its topless models to cover  its bases. 

But another byproduct of Jobs' moralizing is that the very  active Democrat 
-- he has been a vocal champion of Al Gore, no surprise -- has  become 
something of an unlikely hero to the Christian right. 

"How  refreshing it is to see someone who actually gets it -- that yes, 
there are  those of us who prefer to be free from the storm of smut that 
assaults us from  every television, computer, and phone screen," Mark Earley, 
head 
of Prison  Fellowship Ministries, _wrote in a commentary_ 
(http://www.breakpoint.org/bpcommentaries/entry/13/14594)  for his Christian 
organization.  
"May he continue to stand by his principles, and may his tribe increase."  

"While some executives try to out-sleaze their competition, we're  grateful 
that Jobs is trying to keep the iPad from becoming an eyesore," quipped  
Tony Perkins of the _Family Research Council_ 
(http://www.frc.org/washingtonupdate/in-primary-parties-secondary) . That is 
unusual praise from a  man like 
Perkins for a guy like Jobs, who has been pushed by at least _one 
columnist_ 
(http://www.huffingtonpost.com/david-goldstein/steve-jobs-for-dnc-chair_b_435802.html)
  as a future Democratic National Committee  chairman because of 
Jobs' liberal values. 

Still, Jobs' anti-smut stance  has also raised suspicions about his 
motivations, and whether they are spiritual  or material. 

As a teenager, Jobs was reportedly confirmed in his Palo  Alto Lutheran 
church, which is part of the small, conservative branch of  American 
Lutheranism known as the Missouri Synod. But he has always channeled a  West 
Coast 
spirit, first as a vegetarian who visited ashrams in India as a young  man, for 
example, and later as a serious practitioner of Zen Buddhism. That is  not 
exactly the resume of a card-carrying member of the religious  right.

Jobs also has a notorious temper and a potty mouth to match, as  well as a 
burning desire to be first. And even his fans on the Christian right  note 
that Apple still allows apps for magazines like Playboy -- exceptions that  
Schiller, the Apple VP, excused because they come from "a well-known company  
with previously published material available broadly in a well-accepted  
format."

Of course that raises the age-old problems of what constitutes  obscenity. 
"Would an app of images of famous classical art nudes be acceptable?"  
software developer Jamie Montgomerie _asked The Guardian_ 
(http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2010/may/25/ipad-porn-free-steve-jobs) . 

There is also a suspicion  that Jobs is simply acting out of self-interest, 
calculating that pitching Apple  as the Disney of computing will be a smart 
branding move that will earn him  enough market share to offset the 
considerable loss of interest from those who  want to see porn on Apple's 
amazing 
machines. 

"Mr. Jobs seems to be  betting that the attractiveness of his products is 
like the attractiveness of a  glitzy neighborhood: as much a function of what 
is not on display as of what  is," Eric Felten _opined_ 
(http://online.wsj.com/article/SB10001424052748703559004575256401269013236.html)
  at The Wall 
Street Journal. "I suspect he is  also well aware of just how weary parents 
have grown trying to police what their  children see and hear . . . Apple 
seems to realize that it can do far more box  office in its App Store if 
parents are confident they can let their children  make purchases there without 
strict scrutiny."

For now, social  conservatives seem happy to take what they can get, which 
is understandable  given that market economics is not often favorable to 
their agenda.  

"Jobs' refusal to surrender to the Internet's dominating force --  
pornography -- makes his claim of 'freedom from porn' quite plausible," Kevin  
Staley-Joyce wrote _at First Things_ 
(http://www.firstthings.com/blogs/firstthoughts/2010/05/20/steve-jobs-says-no-to-iporn/)
 , a leading journal of social 
and  theological conservativism. "Any such exceptionless moral claim requires 
grit,  and can drive away business. Cynicism is easy, and, rather than 
interpreting  this as a mere mercenary appeal to the pocketbooks of 
family-friendly homes,  it's reasonable to think Steve Jobs has simply taken a 
hard line 
on smut." 
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