Apple pushes back on vibe coding apps like Replit and Vibecode over App Store rules, raising questions about how AI-built apps fit within platform guidelines.
Like so many others, I jumped onto the vibe coding bandwagon, entranced by the idea of building my own incredibly useful apps ...
by Dan Shipper in Chain of Thought Was this newsletter forwarded to you? Sign up to get it in your inbox. At 4 a.m. on the day after we launched our agent-native document editor, Proof, I watched yet ...
Apple has quietly blocked AI "vibe coding" apps, such as Replit and Vibecode, from releasing App Store updates unless they ...
Apple is cracking down on “vibe coding” apps that allow users with little to no programming experience to build apps or websites using natural language prompts, reports The Information (a subscription ...
Apple is blocking updates to vibe coding apps like Replit and Vibe Code, citing rules against executing code that changes functionality.
Vibe coding apps ship with alarming security flaws. What founders need to know about AI-generated code vulnerabilities in ...
Vibe coding is the practice of instructing AI to write code using plain English prompts. CEOs like Google’s Sundar Pichai and Nvidia’s Jensen Huang have touted AI’s ability to write code. I put vibe ...
Updated with Apple’s statement to 9to5Mac after the story. AI is making app development easier than ever. However, a ...
The post Apple is Quietly Restricting AI 'Vibe Coding' Apps in the App Store appeared first on Android Headlines.
Can a non-developer use vibe coding to build and deploy a full-stack app? And can that app actually do anything useful? I used to be a developer, many decades ago, but I’m not one any longer. The ...