Apple Has Reportedly Reversed The Ban On This Mindfulness App From the App Store

Downloading Space is about to get a whole lot easier.

Drake Baer
Thrive Global
2 min readApr 12, 2017

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Image courtesy of Unsplash.

On Tuesday, Thrive Global reported on how the mindfulness app Space was banned from the App Store.

Ramsay Brown, cofounder of the app’s development studio, Dopamine Labs, told us that an App Store Review rep told him that “any app designed to help people use their phones less is unacceptable for distribution in the App Store.”

That’s apparently changed. Brown says that on Tuesday, Apple told him that the company will allow Space into the App Store — it’s slated to be there at the end of the month. Apple’s reported turnaround comes after Sunday’s 60 Minutes, where Dopamine Labs was featured as one of several thought leaders in the movement for ethical software design, called Time Well Spent. (Thrive has reached out to Apple for comment.)

The way Space works is pretty straight forward. Upon signing up, you get a replacement icon for your social media platform of choice. Mine is Twitter, and instead of a solid blue bird, the icon is a spacey bird silhouette.

Upon opening the app, it asks me to breathe for 10 seconds or so. The idea is that if you’re mindlessly checking the app, the breathing prompt will lead you to invest your attention elsewhere so that you only really use the app if you consciously decide to.

Space.

“As someone who cares about what technology does to people’s minds, I have to be optimistic that Apple is taking steps toward responsible persuasive computing,” or recognizing the power software has over people’s minds, Brown says.

To learn more about what devices are doing to our individual minds and society as a whole, read our Q&A with Time Well Spent leader and former Google design ethicist Tristan Harris.

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Drake Baer
Thrive Global

Senior writer at @thriveglobal covering the social and brain sciences. Formerly New York Mag, Business Insider, Fast Company.