WordPress for iOS Was Blocked From Updating Unless it Agreed to Add In-App Purchases for .Com Plans

WordPress for iOS Was Blocked From Updating Unless it Agreed to Add In-App Purchases for .Com Plans

MacRumours.com

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Apple is requiring the WordPress for iOS app to implement in-app purchase options for its .com plans, and prevented the app from getting updates until the development team agreed to add the feature, WordPress developer Matt Mullenweg said on Twitter today.
Mullenweg says the WordPress iOS App was "locked" and to push updates and bug fixes, the company had to agree to add support for in-app purchase plans. There was an update released 19 hours ago after three weeks of no updates, so it appears WordPress has committed to introducing Wordpress.com in-app purchase options.


Heads up on why @WordPressiOS updates have been absent... we were locked by App Store. To be able to ship updates and bug fixes again we had to commit to support in-app purchases for .com plans. I know why this is problematic, open to suggestions. Allow others IAP? New name?

— Matt Mullenweg (@photomatt) August 21, 2020
WordPress.com offers several paid plans for WordPress.com hosting, priced from $4 per month to $45 per month based on features, storage, support, and other parameters. There are also enterprise options that start at $1,700 per month.

WordPress.com plans allow users to set up a custom domain, access email, build full websites, and more, but it is separate from the WordPress platform. Right now, you can create WordPress.com sites in the app, or add a self-hosted site that uses standard WordPress for management purposes, but there's no option to use the app to set up the WordPress.com paid features in the app.

WordPress is a website platform that is the backbone for many websites on the internet. It's a free, open source tool that anyone can use and customize to meet their needs. WordPress.com, meanwhile, is a separate hosting service with the aforementioned paid plans.

Mullenweg says that the WordPress team isn't sure how to implement support for in-app purchases for the WordPress.com sites given that the WordPress app supports sites built on the WordPress platform. The team is mulling introducing a new name for the app or allowing other hosts and plugins to support in-app purchases for their plans.


New name: The app has always done a ton of work to support WordPresses hosted anywhere, using the XML-RPC API included in core WP since WP 2.6 was released in 2008. That's why we called it "WordPress" and not "https://t.co/lj1vCfp4UL" or "Jetpack."

— Matt Mullenweg (@photomatt) August 21, 2020


Allow others IAP: All of the code is open source, if other hosts or plugins wanted to support in-app purchases for their plans we could accept patches and have Automattic pass through the revenue. https://t.co/yJYUG6wQLL

— Matt Mullenweg (@photomatt) August 21, 2020
WordPress for iOS has been available in the ‌App Store‌ for years now, so it's not clear why Apple has decided to require in-app purchases for the WordPress.com purchase plans at this time. The request comes as Apple faces scrutiny from antitrust regulators over its ‌App Store‌ purchase plans, and amid a fierce fight with Epic Games over in-app purchase fees.
This article, "WordPress for iOS Was Blocked From Updating Unless it Agreed to Add In-App Purchases for .Com Plans" first appeared on MacRumors.com

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