Apple will ban apps that warn drivers of DUI checkpoints, according to changes in the company’s App Store Review Guidelines. [Jalopnik] https://jalopnik.com/apple ...
Research In Motion, the maker of BlackBerry smartphones, has agreed to pull downloadable applications that help users evade sobriety checkpoints and drunk driving citations. Sens. Harry Reid of Nevada ...
A SoCal teacher hopes his DUI checkpoint app will help keep drunken drivers off the road - but an anti-drunk driving advocacy group claims it could give drivers a “false sense of security.” Geno Rose, ...
Under names like "Trapster," "Fuzz Alert" and "Phantom Alert," new iPhone and smartphone apps -- many of them free -- scope out where police are lurking looking for speeders or red light violators.
During a U.S. Senate subcommittee hearing on Tuesday, Apple Vice President of Software Technology Guy L. "Bud" Tribble told senators that the company is in the process of "looking into" the legality ...
SF Weekly readers might recall the controversy that ensued after Apple released an iPhone app that would let drivers know exactly where and when they might be crossing a DUI checkpoint.