FRIDAY, JUNE 12, 2026|No. 2498
Protests · WWDC

Protesters at WWDC 2026 Demand Apple Remove Nudify Apps and Child Sexual Abuse Material

Advocacy groups UltraViolet and Heat Initiative protested outside Apple Park during WWDC 2026, calling for the removal of nudify apps and known child sexual abuse imagery from iCloud.

Protesters hold a sign outside Apple Park during WWDC 2026, demanding action against child sexual abuse material.
Protesters hold a sign outside Apple Park during WWDC 2026, demanding action against child sexual abuse material.
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by Jay Peters

Jun 8, 2026, 12:37 PM EDT

Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

Apple’s big developer conference is today, and protesters are using the occasion to call on the company to remove “nudify apps” from the App Store and pull “known” child sexual abuse material from iCloud.

Outside the visitors center at Apple’s Cupertino campus, protesters have put up a large sign saying “Apple is powered by child sexual abuse” and asking incoming CEO John Ternus, “What will you do?” The protesters come from UltraViolet, a women’s advocacy group, and Heat Initiative, a group that aims to “hold tech companies accountable for enabling and profiting from child sexual abuse.”

Apple and Google came under significant scrutiny earlier this year for continuing to keep apps like xAI’s Grok on their app stores even though users were able to make nonconsensual sexualized deepfakes. In pamphlets distributed at the protest, the organizations say that “at least 47 nudify apps have been found on Apple’s App Store” and that “Apple has made an estimated $117 million minimum from nudify apps,” including “an estimated $35+ million from Grok alone,” citing data from the Tech Transparency Project. UltraViolet also has a website dedicated to its protest today.

Photo by Allison Johnson / The Verge

Apple previously scrapped plans to scan photos saved to iCloud for child sexual abuse imagery over privacy concerns.

Apple didn’t immediately reply to a request for comment.

PAN's pipeline reviewed approximately 2 open sources for this article. No human editor reviewed this article before publication.

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