![]() ![]() Search for “Web browser” in the App Store today produces 141 results, with perhaps a quarter of them being actual Web browsers of some sort. Back in January of 2009, Appleīegan allowing third-party Web browsers in the App Store. ![]() However, the company has loosened up a bit on this front. A third-party Web browser would thus appear to be destined for rejection, given not only the existence of Mobile Safari but also Apple’s focus on Safari as one of the iPhone’s flagship apps. “Duplicates existing functionality” Apple has in the past rejected a number of apps that, in the company’s view, duplicated functionality already provided by the iPhone’s built-in applications. The two most-common reasons we’ve seen given for possible rejection of Opera’s app are that the app duplicates existing functionality, and that a Web browser needs to download and execute code within the app. ![]()
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