Message filtering in iOS 26 upsetting politicians

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Apple will be automatically sorting unknown texts into a new category in iOS 26, and that’s causing problems for political groups that rely on donations via unsolicited texts.

Text message filtering based on carrier spam lists and third-party apps have existed on iPhone for years. Apple is expanding this capability and improving sorting with iOS 26, but that could lead to other issues.

According to a letter shared by Punchbowl Newsfirst discovered by Daring FireballiOS 26 could severely impact political groups’ ability to solicit donations from users. The letter was written by the National Republican Senatorial Committee, which says it could see $500 million lost in GOP revenue.

The letter incorrectly suggests that iOS 26 treats unknown callers as spam, which is a separate filtering category. Instead, it will be treated as “unknown,” which it is if the user has never interacted with the number or if it isn’t in their contacts.

That said, the system could certainly lead to users missing the texts — especially less technically sophisticated ones. Unknown texts don’t notify users by default, nor do they place a notification badge on the app icon.

There are several settings available that we’ll get into in a moment, but again, those only apply to those that know to look or care. The letter isn’t wrong in its assertion that Apple’s new feature could lead to missed opportunities to collect political donations.

The biggest issue I take with the letter is its assertion that it needs to deliver unsolicited text messages to users. These political entities have gone through the trouble of ensuring the laws allow them to text people constantly, and carriers have even allowed the behavior.

Apple’s steps to ensure users have some sanity and control over their messaging inbox undercut these efforts. The estimated $25 million revenue hit to the NRSC is certainly not negligible.

However, it isn’t Apple’s problem to solve. Not to mention, investigations show that a lot of political donation campaigns are overly aggressive, use deceptive tactics, and rely on elderly folks with mental health problems to rake in hundreds of thousands of dollars.

Whether or not these political entities are acting legally isn’t up for debate, but their necessity certainly is. Especially when a lot of the texts are mostly attempts to trick people into thinking (insert political name) is texting them directly asking for $20.

The NRSC is just going to have to suck it up and find a new way to get donations. One way would be to let users opt into text messaging alerts and educate them on how to add key numbers to their Contacts app.

Even if Apple isn’t categorizing political texts as spam, the behavior of the texts certainly feels like spam. And while these political entities might not like it, I certainly welcome the granularity and control iOS 26 provides.

iOS 26 Messaging app changes

There are a lot of tiny changes to the iOS 26 app that’ll make managing messages from SMS, RCS, and iMessage a bit easier. There are more categories than just spam and unknown, plus there are fine-tuned controls in Settings.

Smartphone screen showing a message filtering menu with options for messages, unknown senders, transactions, promotions, spam, recently deleted, and manage filtering. Time is 8:32.
Messages categories are easy to access

In Messages, the top right shows a standard “filter” icon. Tap that and you’ll see Messages, Unknown Senders, Transactions, Promotions, Spam, and Recently Deleted.

Transactions has subcategories including Finance, Orders, and Reminders.

Unlike Mail categories, users don’t have a way to recategorize messages. For example, a message from Twelve South should be under “Promotional,” but it still shows up in “Unknown Senders.”

There are some controls available in Settings -> Apps -> Messages. The Unknown Senders section has a few toggles and options.

Screen Unknown Senders is what sends things like political texts to the Unknown Senders category. It’s on by default, but can be toggled off.

Allow Notifications has four toggles — Time Sensitive, Personal, Transactions, and Promotions. If users would like to get notified and have a badge show up on the Messages app icon for one hour, then toggle any or all categories as desired.

So, all is not lost for the NRSC and other political campaigns. Simply educate constituents to toggle these settings as needed.

Otherwise, perhaps it might be a good time to rethink how to get political donations outside of cold calls and spammy unsolicited texts. While it was necessary and worked with previous generations, it likely isn’t going to fly in the notification-overwhelmed masses of today.

Apple is right to have these filters on by default and it at least provides toggles. Above all, no one should be relying on unsolicited, incessant text messages to fund a political movement.

It’s 2025, get people to sign up for a newsletter. Don’t waste time going after Apple for a perfectly reasonable feature.

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