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I have an application in the app store. I have submitted 3 updates to the app. 2 of those 3 updates have been rejected based on something that has not changed at all since the original submission.

I recognize that they have a different person each time review my application.

However, the net effect is:

  • How do I effectively contest a review? I have replied to the review response email each time and never once received a response. If I didn't have customers who expect bugfixes and updates, I'd just resubmit as-is and expect a different reviewer.
  • Is there any phone number, or other way to actually talk to a human about this? The most recent rejection was based on "Infringing on Apple's trademarks" which was ludicrous.
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I removed as much subjective/argumentative substance to this post as I could, but I am still not sure it is really programming related. – Rich B Mar 5 at 3:01
@Rich B, it is programming related in that developers are dealing with issues of acceptability on a regular basis when writing for the iPhone platform. This is a hot topic for a small group of devs. – John Fricker Mar 5 at 3:19
Do you mind telling us what was "infringing on Apple's trademarks"? Just curious... – hhafez Mar 5 at 3:27
A homemade "podcast" icon in similar colors to iTunes' – woo Jul 21 at 4:56

8 Answers

vote up 6 vote down check

Follow their suggestions and be polite. Even though you may disagree with their take on more subjective items like the usage of UI elements, take their advice and adjust your application to match. It doesn't matter if there's something that has been in your application from day one. I had a table view that improperly retained a selection when it shouldn't, something that had been in there from the launch of the App Store. When they pointed it out, I corrected the error and the application passed review a couple days later. Sometimes you really are the one at fault.

If after reworking you still receive a rejection and have no idea how to work around it, write an articulate, polite response to the reviewers asking for clarification and possible suggestions. Resist the urge to run out and start yelling to the world at large that Apple is specifically suppressing you and your innovation. That will only hurt you in the long run. Remember, there are real people at the other end of that From: address.

Anyone who's dealt with the U.S. patent system will find similarities here. Sometimes you get a patent examiner who picks apart every last element in your filing, and sometimes you get a patent issued with ridiculously broad claims. In both cases, you're dealing with organizations that have a huge volume of applications to sort through (although the patent office is far more restrictive). I've found that the patience and willingness to accept changes that works with one organization helps when dealing with the other.

Beyond all this, it helps to cultivate relationships with the people at Apple. They do want to assist you, and their engineers are extremely helpful people. WWDC is coming up and is a great place to get to know these engineers, as are the other Apple-hosted tech events. If you develop an advocate for your work within the company, that can definitely help with the review process.

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vote up 8 vote down

I've had a similar problem with an update getting rejected. You still must address the rejection issue even though the current in store app has the same problem.

The only way I know of to talk with a real person is to pay $199 for an ADC support ticket.

Since this seems to be a fact of life right now for the App Store, it's affecting everyone. So our customers, clients and users will have to bear with us while Apple works the kinks out and scales up.

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You don't. You can't. You just have to resubmit.

Its one of the biggest problems with the app store.

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vote up 1 vote down

It's one the larger issues with Apple's feedback system. No way to "fix" poor viewers.

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I have seen a few people complaining about this as if the fact that an app slips past the first reviewer is somehow granting them a precedent.

Consider the App Store reviewers as testers. If you hand off successive versions of an app to test, would you claim that a bug picked up in the second round of testing had a right to exist because it was missed the first time?

They are testing your app against UI and business guidelines as seriously as they are also seeing if it crashes. I'd be thankful for the range of eyeballs - it is one way to guarantee that the iPhone firehose of app delivery doesn't spout out too many inconsistencies!

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Thanks for all the great feedback... as it turns out, I've followed most of the advice (bite the bullet, resubmit, be nice, etc.) I finally got frustrated, called ADC and they "elevated my claim" which produced two results. The next business day the app was approved (I'd of course made the changes they suggested... even though it basically meant turning off a feature completely due to their super vague terms. The second result was that I actually got a response to my reply to their review! This was a first so I view it as a success! Make the phone call if you're in my same shoes.

I do really get the sense that the review process, app store's problems are more from it's novelty and shear success. I don't get the feeling that apple's "out to get people" but just that they're understaffed and overworked and really clueless about how to do things, but like everything apple seems to do, they'll get better with time. I've seen lots of changes already and can only assume they'll keep use poor indy developers in mind (since a number of the huge app store successes are from us!)

That's all!

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No, that's the problem with tying yourself to Apple's iPhone; as far as they're concerned, they are the final arbiters.

I would just make a minor change and resubmit, hoping for a new reviewer.

Otherwise, consider moving to a different platform that doesn't have this problem (I know that's not much help but, if enough coders deserted Apple because of their stubbornness, they'd soon change their ways).

If the rejections from iStore have the reason in them (e.g., "fix this bit here"), you may just have to bite the bullet and fix it.

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@Pax, The 20 million platform users is sure an attractive market. What mobile platform is comparable? – John Fricker Mar 5 at 3:54
That will be a potential 20 million people baying for your blood and dissing your software all over the internet because Apple won't let you release a bug fix :-) – paxdiablo Mar 5 at 3:59
I don't know where Android's at (mobile devices aren't really my area of expertise) but I'm pretty certain it won't suffer from the monopoly-style channel-control problems that the iStore gives you. Whether it's ever as big a market force as iPhone remains to be seen. – paxdiablo Mar 5 at 4:01
Android is interesting but it's not exactly off to an iPhone like start. It's worth the patience while Apple sorts out the growing pains. – John Fricker Mar 5 at 4:09
Why bother getting your digs in at Apple for the way they are managing their platform? While I agree they should fix their approval process problems, I'm quite certain that other mobile platforms, like Qualcomm BREW and the carriers that use it, are even more restrictive. – RibaldEddie Mar 5 at 4:41
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vote up 0 vote down

I tried calling ADC for the same reason (app rejected twice for same reason, even though I fixed the problem), but they say they don't deal with the review process at all. How did you get them to elevate your claim?

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