
Apple is reported to be in βpreliminary talksβ with Foursquare as it explores a deal to bring the social networkβs user data to its much-criticized maps service, according to the Wall Street Journal.
Talks are said to have taken place in βrecent weeksβ and involved Eddy Cue, who took over the management of Appleβs maps division during a recent executive reshuffle. The company is under more pressure after Google finally launched its standalone iOS maps app last week, seeing an impressive 10 million downloads in the first 48 hours.
There is no immediate suggestion of an acquisition and the Wall Street Journal hints that Apple is holding discussions with other map and content firms. That could corroborate past reports that the iPhone making is said to be talking to βoutside mapping expertsβ and βproddingβ mapping company TomTom NV to help it refine that data.
Itβs no secret that Apple has been looking to enhance Apple Maps, which was released to largely negative reviews in September and continues to generate controversy, the most recent incident being an Australian police force warning that data errors within the service were putting travelers in βpotentially life threatening positions.β
A deal to bring data from Foursquare to the tablet β which TNWβs Matthew Panzarino discussed in detail just last week after spotting a Foursquare check-in from Cue β would massively increase business listings and peer-generated details, many of which are missing on Appleβs product.
Foursquare actually announced a fairly significant refresh of its discovery features today; and weβve long said it could work well with Siri.
The Maps affair reportedly resulted in the Apple SVP Cue firing Richard Williamson, the manager overseeing its mapping service. Apple CEO Tim Cook took the unique step of apologizing to users directly with an open letter that encouraged them to try mapping services from Google, Nokia, Waze and others.
In the letter, Cook says that Apple is βextremely sorry for the frustration this has caused our customers and we are doing everything we can to make Maps better.β That was followed by an interview with Bloomberg in which Cook said that Apple has a βhuge planβ to make its maps service even better, after admitting that it βscrewed up.β
Scott Forstall, who formerly oversaw iOS development at Apple, is also rumored to have been discard as a result of the affair. The SVP was said to have been pushed out after refusing to sign the apology letter, which was eventually issued by CEO Tim Cook. Cue took charge of the maps division following Forstallβs abrupt departure, which was announced on October 29 and sees him exit in 2013.
Image via bfishadow / Flickr
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