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China Apple

Apple Reportedly Cuts Over 700 Apps from Chinese App Store (cnet.com) 27

Apple has reportedly removed 718 apps from the Chinese App Store in the last few days. From a report: The iPhone maker swept out the apps because their developers pushed updates without its permission, The Telegraph reported, citing local reports. Apple warned developers against updating iOS apps without its permission in early 2017. The banned apps included Sogou's search engine and maps, online retailer Pinduodo and car sharing service Togo Car.
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Apple Reportedly Cuts Over 700 Apps from Chinese App Store

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  • Huh? I don't get it. ALL app submissions and updates have to be reviewed and approved by Apple.

    Is there an additional step required in the Chinese store, to ask permission before submitting the update for review?

    • Re:Mother May I? (Score:4, Informative)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 ) on Friday November 30, 2018 @01:53PM (#57727042)

      Huh? I don't get it. ALL app submissions and updates have to be reviewed and approved by Apple.

      Wrong. This is about out of App Store updates. See also: Apple begins strictly enforcing rule that prohibits iOS app updates outside of App Store [appleinsider.com]

      Stop being dense.

      • by jtara ( 133429 )

        This is about out of App Store updates. See also: Apple begins strictly enforcing rule that prohibits iOS app updates outside of App Store [appleinsider.com]

        Stop being dense.

        The C|Net article said nothing about that. It left us in the dark.

        They did link to the article you cite above, which does explain it. Should have been in the article. Yes, I was aware of this and noted the press coverage at the time, but didn't make any connection from that poorly-written article.

        As an app developer, I'm well aware of t

    • Huh? I don't get it. ALL app submissions and updates have to be reviewed and approved by Apple.

      Imagine your app has a configuration file, which it can download from your company's website, and suddenly the app changes its behaviour. Without any review. That's what Apple is removing.

      • by jtara ( 133429 )

        Imagine your app has a configuration file, which it can download from your company's website, and suddenly the app changes its behaviour. Without any review.

        I don't think that's what this is about, though. Though that can be a problem as well, if not disclosed.

        From the article linked above (that was linked from the C|Net article, but that the author apparently didn't read or comprehend...) this is actually about downloading executable code.

        There are these crazy schemes that use Javascript (which is approve

  • It seems that Apple is protecting its brand and its customers.

    A secure platform (Apple does money, yes it does) has a lot of reasons
    to managed the stuff folk install and when.

    Consider zero day exploits. What if a "dark web" exploit is picked up and
    is quickly instantiated by an application and pushed to all of a market before
    Apple can update iOS. It may be a known bug to Apple... just not yet patched.

    There are a number of attacks. The most common successful attacks involve
    code that can be run locally on

There are two ways to write error-free programs; only the third one works.

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