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Jack Dorsey-Backed Damus App to Suspend Tipping Feature as App Store Threatens Removal

Damus has announced it will remove the zaps feature that allows users to tip, following potential dismissal from the App Store.

Decentralized social app Damus has said that Apple may take the platform of its App Store. According to the Jack Dorsey-backed app, the App Store may remove Damus within 14 days unless the app eliminates some specific in-app payments.

Damus posted a tweet on Tuesday which contained screenshots of the app review from Apple’s App Store. The social messaging app allows users to exchange tips via Bitcoin using the Lightning Network. These payment exchanges go directly between users and are not controlled or initiated by Damus. The app runs on the Nostr platform and calls these payments “zaps”.

According to the tweet, Apple does not approve of zaps because creators could use them to sell content on Damus. The App Store requires that all in-app payments go through Apple, and retains a 30% fee. In response to a user chiding Apple for the threat, Damus clarified that the payments are strictly peer-to-peer.

“Damus doesn’t sell any digital goods or provide features for selling digital goods. It simply has a tip [button] for facilitating p2p transactions like venmo or cashapp,” the company wrote.

However, in another tweet, Damus said it “has to remove the zap button on posts,” so it does not violate Apple’s requirement. Nonetheless, it notes that “only zaps on profiles are allowed.”

Jack Dorsey Responds to Threat of Damus Removal from App Store

Twitter founder and former CEO Jack Dorsey has responded to Apple’s zaps interpretation and the threat of deletion from the App Store. In a tweet where he tagged Apple CEO Tim Cook, Dorsey clarified that users who tip on posts are only engaging in the form of feedback and not selling digital content. He also added that Apple is missing a chance to be part of global payments.

The tweet reads:

“Why limit people sending bitcoin to each other? This is our one opportunity to build a truly global payment protocol for the internet (which would benefit your company immensely).”

Damus debuted on the App Store in January and also made it to Google’s Play Store. The app had about 40 developers who worked tirelessly to finetune the app and also integrate the Lightning Network.

Bluesky, another social media app backed by Jack Dorsey, launched privately on the App Store in February. The idea for Bluesky came in 2019 when Dorsey was still functioning as the CEO of Twitter. However, the company broke off and became a separate entity in 2021.

Last year, Bluesky announced it received $13 million to support the platform’s independence, as well as research and development. The announcement confirmed that the Bluesky team had Dorsey on the board and an unnamed ex-Twitter security engineer on the team.

In a follow-up tweet, Bluesky said Twitter funded the app without conditions. The only requirement is that Bluesky uses the funding to develop technologies that support open and decentralized public conversation.



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Tolu is a cryptocurrency and blockchain enthusiast based in Lagos. He likes to demystify crypto stories to the bare basics so that anyone anywhere can understand without too much background knowledge.
When he’s not neck-deep in crypto stories, Tolu enjoys music, loves to sing and is an avid movie lover.



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