Comment by isodev
8 months ago
And 3, Apple asking for a photo of the ID instead of using eID so the entire process can be tap > Face ID (in your country’s eID app) > done.
Also for some reason on App Store Connect, Apple is asking for a country of birth, not citizenship so with that alone, it’s unclear to me how can they make a determination at all.
Once again, our random spawn point (of which we have no control) is interfering with what we can and can’t do in life. Oh and Apple totally not getting how people live and move in the EU.
> Once again, our random spawn point (of which we have no control) is interfering with what we can and can’t do in life.
This is how wartime works.
My understanding is that the EU sanctions themselves do care about place of birth, separately from citizenship, not just Apple’s implementation. I’ve certainly seen such a question in non-Apple implementations of these sanctions.
As for not supporting eID, yeah that isn’t great, but so many people have non-electronic EU residence permits (including me within the last few years - though I don’t have Russian origin or citizenship) that they’d have to support the non-eID flow regardless. Maybe they wanted one fewer flow to implement, or maybe they felt that eID verification didn’t meet their compliance needs. No idea there.
>And 3, Apple asking for a photo of the ID instead of using eID so the entire process can be tap > Face ID (in your country’s eID app) > done.
Because actual technology is alien to Americans. We are still signing documents as if that means securitah.
> our random spawn point
It's not random.
That depends on your beliefs. People who believed in caste systems definitely believed it's not random.
It might be random. Nobody guarantees is uniformly random.
Damn, I must have skipped through the customization wizard.