The Human Flag app is a peaceful signal. A symbolic act of surrender in a world that often refuses to listen.
And yet, you cannot install it on iOS. Not because of a bug. Not because of danger. But because the platform blocks it by design.
To install any app outside the App Store, Apple requires you to:
Which means: a symbolic app for surrender, peace, dignity — must be approved by a profit-driven gatekeeper.
There’s no private data. No ads. No tracking. No violence. Just a digital white flag. And still, it's not allowed.
When an app that says “Don’t kill me” is blocked by design, the system is no longer neutral.
On Android, you can install the app freely from this site. You can say “I surrender” in code. You can act. On iPhone, you can’t.
Humanitarian technology must be free to exist. When companies prevent peaceful tools from being distributed, they become part of the silence.
This is not just about Apple. It's about power deciding who gets to speak — and who doesn't, even when the words are: I surrender.