Google and Apple are under pressure from human rights groups and a U.S. senator to remove from their stores an app called Absher. The app was created by the Saudi government and includes a feature that helps men monitor and control women who are under their guardianship, including wives and unmarried daughters.
Saudi men have this right thanks to the country's oppressive guardianship laws, which mandate every woman has a male guardian to make critical life decisions on her behalf. That guardian can be a father, brother, husband, or son, according to Human Rights Watch. So men get the power to approve things like whether a woman applies for a passport, studies abroad, travels outside the country, or gets married. That system was already well in place before Absher'’s debut, but the app makes controlling women much more efficient.
SEE ALSO:Senators demand answers from Facebook, Google, and Apple over now-banned ‘research’ monitoring appsWhile Absher was released in 2015, it's prompted new scrutiny. One woman pursuing asylum recently indicated that she tried to flee the country without being detected by Absher and her male guardian. In order to travel, women must be granted permission through the app. Many can't make it far because the app alerts guardians every time their dependents use their passports, according to Insider.
Now human rights groups, including Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch, as well as Sen. Ron Wyden, a Democrat from Oregon, are urging Apple and Google to remove Absher from their app stores.

Tweet may have been deleted
"By permitting the app in your respective stores, your companies are making it easier for Saudi men to control their family members from the convenience of their smartphones and restrict their movement," Wyden wrote in a letter addressed to Apple CEO Tim Cook and Google CEO Sundar Pichai.
Cook replied vaguely when asked about the app during an NPR interview this week. "I haven't heard about it," he said. "But obviously we'll take a look at it if that's the case."
Google told CNN the company would be "looking into it."
Even if Google and Apple remove the app from their stores, it won't solve the problem of male guardianship. As columnist Mona Eltahawy pointed out on Twitter, the app simply "enables gender apartheid in #Saudi Arabia, remember that it is male guardianship that is the issue here."
Tweet may have been deleted
Still, activists believe Apple and Google could send a powerful message to the Saudi government by dropping Absher.
Hala Aldosari, an activist and scholar who studies gender in the Arab Gulf states, told the New York Times: "If the tech companies would say, 'You are being oppressive,' that would mean a lot."
TopicsAppleGoogleSocial Good
(责任编辑:綜合)
Donald Trump's tangled web of Russian influence
Trump prays for 'Apprentice' ratings, Schwarzenegger prays for America
Another Silicon Valley guy locks down an escape plan
Sweden's deputy PM is trolling Trump so hard with this picture
U.S. pole vaulter skids to a halt for national anthemThis coloring book is here for all your relationship goals
LONDON -- We are living through the golden age of celebrity relationships. Gone are the days of tort
...[详细]HP recalls 101,000 laptop batteries that could catch fire
Another day, another battery recall.
。HP's expanding on a battery recall issued last June to include
...[详细]Yes, Kim Kardashian really did pierce her nails
The great thing about Kim Kardashian's social media resurgence is the return of her Snapchat.。 Once
...[详细]Madeleine Albright tweets plan to counter Trump's immigration policy
Former U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright has said that she’s ready to register as Mus
...[详细]Donald Trump's tangled web of Russian influence
Donald Trump has had ties to Russia for decades, but they've thickened as his campaign for the White
...[详细]This nifty trick lets Android users download all the Netflix movies they want
Netflix's movie and TV shows download feature is pretty great. Wanna know what's not so great? If yo
...[详细]What is breadcrumbing on dating apps?
Online dating is kind of infuriating. You spend night after night swiping left and right in the hunt
...[详细]Rihanna dabbing at Women's March in New York is as good as it sounds
Where was Rihanna Saturday night? Dabbing out front of Trump Tower in New York City, why do you ask?
...[详细]Fyvush Finkel, Emmy winner for 'Picket Fences,' dies at 93
NEW YORK (AP) — Actor Fyvush Finkel, the plastic-faced Emmy Award-winning character actor whos
...[详细]Netflix teases a gadget that lets you browse with just your brain
Netflix may soon have a way for binge-watchers to take their laziness to new heights.。A group of the
...[详细]Samsung Galaxy Note7 teardown reveals the magic behind the phone's iris scanner

Oreo beer is here to add some cookie to your cold one
