TE
TechEcho
Home24h TopNewestBestAskShowJobs
GitHubTwitter
Home

TechEcho

A tech news platform built with Next.js, providing global tech news and discussions.

GitHubTwitter

Home

HomeNewestBestAskShowJobs

Resources

HackerNews APIOriginal HackerNewsNext.js

© 2025 TechEcho. All rights reserved.

Apple’s $64 billion-a-year App Store isn’t catching the most egregious scams

60 pointsby egocentricabout 4 years ago

4 comments

rpdillonabout 4 years ago
Apple&#x27;s response is pretty empty:<p>&gt; “We designed and built the App Store to be a safe and trusted place for our users, and are constantly improving our processes to reduce fraud, malware and spam. To provide our users with the best experience, we regularly reject and remove apps, as well as fraudulent ratings and reviews, resulting in millions of removals every year. We intend to keep at this important work to ensure users can confidently download the apps they love and developers continue to make the App Store a great business opportunity.”<p>Sounds like they remove apps for lots of reasons (non-Apple payment methods, mentioning app store rules in release notes, etc.), but they don&#x27;t have much incentive to remove apps that are top-grossing, since they get a cut of the scam as well.
评论 #26892909 未加载
jollybeanabout 4 years ago
Great work Kosta, I&#x27;ve met him, he&#x27;s brilliant.<p>The fact that it&#x27;s essentially trivial for a non-technical&#x2F;non-expert to uncover obvious elements of fraud I think gives pause to the oft-repeated mantle &quot;Our Control is Essential To Your Security&quot;. There are some voices here who oddly believe that their limited choice is a price worth paying for quality, but the reality is there&#x27;s no legitimate reason for Apple to not allow 3rd party downloads if users so chose, and, no legitimate reason for them to not provide considerably more transparency in the approval process.<p>The paradox is, that unlike Amazon.com who may or may not actually benefit from a deluge of fake goods, Apple definitely doesn&#x27;t need these scammy apps around for it&#x27;s own benefit.
评论 #26891867 未加载
mcraihaabout 4 years ago
And many of these issues are same for many bigger players, &quot;thousands of fake 5-star reviews&quot;, &quot;scams&quot; and &quot;recurring subscriptions&quot;.<p>Situation won&#x27;t get better without legislative changes.
1cvmaskabout 4 years ago
There are always tradeoffs. If the pendulum swings the other way how many innocent apps would be sacrificed at the altar of “good”. I rarely see any of the cost&#x2F;benefit analysis here. The same problem occurs in many other realms of society.<p>I like the Android option of being able to download apps (at your own risk) from a url without the app store. It is optional and used by very few people of course. But freedom to choose at ones own risk is the guarantor of liberty from the App Store overlords and their dictates.