Rohan Chaubey

Apple Cracks Down on ‘Vibe Coding’ Apps

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Apple is reportedly pushing back on AI “vibe coding” apps like @Replit and @Vibecode App, tools that let users create apps just by typing prompts.

The issue isn’t a new rule. Apple is enforcing an old one:

  • Apps must be self-contained

  • They can’t download or run new code that changes functionality after review

That’s exactly what vibe coding apps do, they can turn into completely new apps on the fly.

Apple is cracking down on apps with AI vibe coding capabilities listed in the App Store, preventing the rapid creation of apps that don't pass through the App Store Review process.

  • Vibe coding turns anyone into a builder instantly, apps evolve in real-time

  • Apple wants predictability, security, and control over what runs on iPhones

From Apple’s POV, this could:

  • Break the review system

  • Introduce unpredictable or unsafe behavior

  • Even bypass the App Store entirely

From developers’ POV:

  • This limits a major shift in how software is created

  • Feels like Apple protecting its ecosystem (and revenue)

Apple is okay with AI helping you build apps (even integrating AI into Xcode)

But it draws the line at: AI-generated apps that run and evolve inside another app

Chrome Web Store could face a similar issue where extension developers auto-update without full reviews, and Google hasn't cracked down yet, worth watching for changes.


What's your take? With AI now generating apps instantly, should Apple and Google retain tight control over distribution, or is the gatekeeper model starting to crack?

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Saber Kasbaoui
@rohanrecommends sounds like a familiar pattern: when companies can’t keep up with change, they fall back on restricting and regulating rather than innovating. Slightly surprising to see this dynamic coming from players like Apple and Google though
Calvin Lim

There's so many copycat apps I think it was just a matter of time before Apple cracked down a bit. Interested to see how this plays out long term. I think this crackdown ensures apps meet some level of quality and not turn into the Wild West.

Tom Riedel

Yeah, I heard about Replit and wondered how it could actually work. There's a bit more than just coding needed to get on the app store.

Gianmarco Carrieri

The distinction Apple is making isn't really about AI — it's about containment. Replit's problem is that generated code runs inside Replit itself, making the app's reviewable surface area effectively infinite. An AI coding tool that routed outputs through a separate App Store submission would be fine under the same rule. What's being cracked down on is apps that double as their own runtime for unbounded user-generated behavior — vibe coding just happens to be the clearest example of that.

Umair

tbh apple is right on this one. an app that can mass-produce other apps inside itself is basically a sideloading backdoor with extra steps. the "gatekeeper" framing makes it sound anti-innovation but letting unreviewed code run on peoples phones is how you get malware factories lol