Last month, Apple confirmed that iOS 17.4 would remove support for Home Screen web apps in the European Union, but now the company has done an about-face and says it will “continue to offer the existing Home Screen web apps capability in the EU.”
[Originally], Apple explained that it would have to build an “entirely new integration architecture that does not currently exist in iOS” to address the “complex security and privacy concerns associated with web apps using alternative browser engines.” This, the company said, “was not practical to undertake given the other demands of the DMA and the very low user adoption of Home Screen web apps.”
With today’s announcement, Apple has reversed course and said that Home Screen web apps will continue to exist as they did pre-iOS 17.4 in the European Union. “This support means Home Screen web apps continue to be built directly on WebKit and its security architecture, and align with the security and privacy model for native apps on iOS,” Apple explains today.
This means that all Home Screen web apps will still be powered by WebKit, regardless of whether the web app is added using Safari or not – exactly as it works today and has for years.
MacDailyNews Take: Apple’s statement:
Previously, Apple announced plans to remove the Home Screen web apps capability in the EU as part of our efforts to comply with the DMA. The need to remove the capability was informed by the complex security and privacy concerns associated with web apps to support alternative browser engines that would require building a new integration architecture that does not currently exist in iOS.
We have received requests to continue to offer support for Home Screen web apps in iOS, therefore we will continue to offer the existing Home Screen web apps capability in the EU. This support means Home Screen web apps continue to be built directly on WebKit and its security architecture, and align with the security and privacy model for native apps on iOS.
Developers and users who may have been impacted by the removal of Home Screen web apps in the beta release of iOS in the EU can expect the return of the existing functionality for Home Screen web apps with the availability of iOS 17.4 in early March.
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The market is roaring and AAPL is getting absolutely bitchslapped while tech is soaring. AAPL down 5 straight days in extremely heavy trading as investors dump shares of the feckless stock.
Someone was bound to ask about how the security between browsers on iOS was different when they all had to use the same Webkit.
If they all use the same browser engine, then wtf is the point of using then over regular safari?
I’m thinking cosmetic features like how they manage bookmarks. There was an instance a few years ago where a certain exploit only affected the iOS version of Chrome. One guess what the exploit targeted.