![]() ![]() How do I restrict apps by content rating? The FTC scrutiny refers to a recent report which raises privacy questions about mobile apps for kids. Lorraine Akemann, one of the founding members, also noted that “things are changing all the time, especially with the FTC scrutiny on the mobile privacy space”. Member Eugene Stolin of Mind Vitamins confirmed that this is still the way it works. I also posed this question to the members at Moms with Apps, a group of app developers who promote quality apps for kids and families. The most recent information I could find about this is from 2009. The rating is then generated based on that description. How do apps get their content ratings?īased on my research it seems that the app developer fills out a form describing their application. Applications in this category may also contain frequent and intense offensive language frequent and intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence and frequent and intense mature, horror, and suggestive themes plus sexual content, nudity, alcohol, tobacco, and drugs which may not be suitable for children under the age of 17. Here are descriptions of the ratings, straight out of iTunes.Ĥ+ Applications in this category contain no objectionable material.ĩ+ Applications in this category may contain mild or infrequent occurrences of cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence, and infrequent or mild mature, suggestive, or horror-themed content which may not be suitable for children under the age of 9.ġ2+ Applications in this category may also contain infrequent mild language, frequent or intense cartoon, fantasy or realistic violence, and mild or infrequent mature or suggestive themes, and simulated gambling which may not be suitable for children under the age of 12.ġ7+ You must be at least 17 years old to purchase this application. You can decide which apps your kids can download from the App store or iTunes based on their rating. Apps have ratings similar to movie ratings - G, PG, PG-13 and R. Today I want to specifically focus on app restrictions. In other words if an instance has been discovered at that point which doesn't have the nofollow keyword in its rel, then the link will be followed.One of the parental control features on the iPod touch (and iPad and iPhone) is restriction by content rating. ![]() Now observes rel=nofollow in a link, if at the point the engine comes to follow that link, *all instances discovered so far* are marked 'rel=nofollow'.This does raise some questions and the matter is left open at this point. ie if it is internal according to its domain, integrity does not mark it as an external link or treat it as external, ie not following it. Despite collecting the data and possibly generating a warning, Integrity does not *observe* the rel=external at this point.This may be deliberate and is legal but there are serious SEO implications if it happens unintentionally. Now generates a warning if a link that appears to be internal (from its domain) but is marked rel=external.Fixes a problem with the link inspector not displaying all instances of the link url if it appears multiple times on a particular page.Opens and scans a list of links in HTML, CSV, plain text format, or XML sitemap.On finish, send an email, save a report, open a file or AppleScript, FTP the sitemap XML, and other actions.Scheduling made easy with a few easy clicks.Website monitoring of as many URL's as you like with a choice of alerts and logging.Search your site (source or visible text) obtain a list of pages containing a search term or not containing a search term.XML sitemap generation, optionally include images / PDF pages.Version 12 is a major update and includes these new features. Scrutiny is a suite of web optimization tools including link checking, SEO checks, Sitemap generation, page load speed test, html validation. ![]()
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