Apple has removed ShareChatโ€™s social discovery app, Vibely, from the App Store, citing violations of Section 1.2 regarding user-generated content (UGC) safety. This enforcement action highlights an accelerating trend: platform gatekeepers are increasingly holding developers strictly accountable for anonymous interaction features that invite moderation failure.

What Happened

The takedown targets Vibelyโ€™s โ€œrandom or anonymous chatโ€ functionality, which Apple deemed in violation of updated review guidelines aimed at preventing harmful interactions like harassment and non-consensual objectification. While the developer maintains that Vibely is an experimental, revenue-neutral project, the removal was immediate and without a remediation grace period. ShareChat is now forced into a reactive compliance review to restore app store standing.

Why It Matters

First-order: For any platform reliant on UGC or anonymous connectivity, the โ€œmove fast and break thingsโ€ approach to product iteration is officially dead on iOS. Apple is prioritizing safety-by-design over user growth.

Second-order: This sets a dangerous precedent for discovery-based social apps. If a platform cannot prove immediate, automated, and human-in-the-loop moderation for every edge-case interaction, they face total removal. This increases the operational overhead for startups, as moderation is no longer a โ€œDay 2โ€ problem.

Third-order: We are seeing a structural decoupling of โ€œsocial discoveryโ€ features from core app architectures. Companies will likely move these high-risk features into web-based environments or PWA wrappers to bypass App Store review, fundamentally altering the user acquisition funnel.

What To Watch

  • Increased audit requests from Apple for apps hosting live, anonymous, or ephemeral social features.
  • A rise in โ€œsafety-techโ€ infrastructure procurement by startups to meet minimum platform requirements.
  • Shift in product roadmaps away from random-match features toward identity-verified or reputation-gated interactions.