CambridgeKev wrote:You are so right. You cannot fix problems with tech but you can create problems with tech and this is a classic example of that You can’t ever get to that place you might want and might imagine, because there will always be faults to be found.There will always be opportunities for mistrust to exist and grow, always be opportunities for mistrust to be created, and always opportunities for control to be exerted. Always.If there aren’t any levers — pristine behavior, no mobile phone at all, just a shared landline phone — entirely imagined levers can be created wholly new. You’ll be claimed to have a second, secret, hidden mobile phone, or whatever other lever is imagined necessary.Richelieu, DARVO, lots of examples exist, and there many good and fine observations to learn from. Again, you cannot solve a people problem with tech. There will always be opportunities for mistrust, and for abuse., Apple apparently decided not to make this mistake with the hidden apps folder. The hidden folder does no harm in the App Library, where users never go unless they’ve lost sight of an app. Which brings to mind the swarm of messages saying “how do I get rid of the App Library”., On an iPhone with iOS 14, if the app is on a Home screen, touch and hold the app, tap Remove app and then tap Delete App (or tap Edit Home Screen in the pop up menu, tap the minus sign, then tap Delete App) If the app is only in the App Library screen (swipe left past the last Home screen), touch and hold the app there and then tap Delete app..