GeekyDad
Member
This is not true: I've seen an app rejected because there was a cartoon girl drawn from behind, and you could see a bit of the underwear from under the pants: REJECTED
Also, another app wanted to give all the proceedings to a charity: REJECTED (you can do it, but you cannot write that in the app or on the App Store)
An app I made myself read a feed of news from an indie game website (Indievault), and Apple rejected it because one of the news was a simple contest IV was making internally. They said you can't put contest in apps, and you cannot use Apple products as a prize, something we were not doing anyway: REJECTED (for this one, by the time we resubmitted the news was old so it didn't show in the app anymore: APPROVED)
There are a lot of legal things, and also I guess it depends on the single person that reviews the app... how does he feel that day.
I think he/she was merely distilling the idea that Apple does very little to protect creative properties. What you list up there is Apple protecting their own ass, not the actual devs/publishers.