Baby Shaker (lost banned iOS game; 2009): Difference between revisions

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==Availability==
==Availability==
Unless someone still has the app installed on their old iPhone, all that is left of the game is one gameplay footage and a few screenshots. There are news articles and reports talking about the app that also exist. It even got its own section on the iPhone page on the infamous illegal doxxing site, Encyclopedia Dramatica (Please be aware this site is illegal in most areas).
Unless someone still has the app installed on their old iPhone, all that is left of the game is one gameplay footage and a few screenshots. There are news articles and reports talking about the app that also exist. It even got its own section on the iPhone page on the infamous illegal doxxing site, Encyclopedia Dramatica (Please be aware this site is illegal in most areas, so please do not link it here. Anyone who does so will be dealt with.).


Considering the app's treatment of the subject matter and how fast it was pulled from the App Store, it's safe to say that the game is lost.  
Considering the app's treatment of the subject matter and how fast it was pulled from the App Store, it's safe to say that the game is lost.  

Revision as of 16:37, 3 October 2022

Nsfl.png


This article has been tagged as NSFL due to its depiction of child abuse, and a mention of a illegal website.



Baby shaker icon.png

Icon of the app.

Status: Lost

Baby Shaker was a controversial game released on the App Store in 2009 by Sikalosoft for $0.99.[1] As the name suggests, the game has you shake your iPhone to stop a crying infant until two X marks appear on their eyes.

History

The game was released on the App Store on Monday, April 20th, 2009. At 10:00 pm, a website called KRAPPS discovered the app and published an article on their website. They would later announce the article on Twitter. The following day at 9:18 am, a founder of a non-profit organization (Stop Shaken Baby Syndrome, Inc.) named Jennipher Dickens saw the article. She would later tweet about it and send the article for a press release to 30,000 media companies about the game.[2]

Once both the media and the public became aware of the app's existence, people were outraged. Many child advocacy groups accused the app of both making fun of and glorifying Shaken Baby Syndrome, a form of brain injury that occurs when a baby or a toddler is shaken (Ironic or not, the game was even released around the same time of Shaken Baby Syndrome Awareness Week and National Child Abuse Prevention Month). Several people even contacted Apple to remove the app, which they did.[3]

One day later, Apple pulled Baby Shaker from the App Store. The app would reappear the next day before being taken down again that afternoon. This time, it was permanent.

An Apple spokesperson would later issue an apology in an interview with Macworld with the following statement:

"This application was deeply offensive and should not have been approved for distribution on the App Store. When we learned of this mistake, the app was removed immediately. We sincerely apologize for this mistake and thank our customers for bringing this to our attention." - A spokesperson on the controversy.[4]

The app's developer would respond to the backlash on their website. They admitted it was a bad idea and that the app was "greatly lacking in taste" while also stating:

"It was later taken down because it was a baby-shaking video game! While GTA is a video game that pushes the limits, it is still yet to have a baby-shaking mini-game in it." - The developer on the game's removal.[5]

Availability

Unless someone still has the app installed on their old iPhone, all that is left of the game is one gameplay footage and a few screenshots. There are news articles and reports talking about the app that also exist. It even got its own section on the iPhone page on the infamous illegal doxxing site, Encyclopedia Dramatica (Please be aware this site is illegal in most areas, so please do not link it here. Anyone who does so will be dealt with.).

Considering the app's treatment of the subject matter and how fast it was pulled from the App Store, it's safe to say that the game is lost.

Gallery

Images

Footage

Gameplay footage of the app in action.

A news report about the game and its controversy.

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My Name Is Doomguy's video on the subject (Spanish).

External Links

References