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Apple Technology

Apple Approved Another Illegal Streaming App (theverge.com) 19

An anonymous reader shares a report: Another illegal streaming app has made its way to the App Store -- but it only surfaces pirated films for people in certain regions outside the US, including France, Canada, and the Netherlands. As shown in a post on Threads, the App Store listing for "Univer Note" presents itself as a productivity platform that can "easily help you record every day's events and plan your time." However, if you're a user in certain countries, like France or Canada, opening the app shows a collection of pirated movies, such as Venom: The Last Dance, Joker: Folie a Deux, and Terrifier 3.

Apple Approved Another Illegal Streaming App

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  • by Rosco P. Coltrane ( 209368 ) on Monday November 04, 2024 @11:56AM (#64918711)

    Are they an accessory?

  • A lot of films are french only, so ymmv
  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Monday November 04, 2024 @12:25PM (#64918813) Journal

    Whenever Apple and Tesla make relatively small mistakes it makes the news because of the political and social implications associated with the companies. Apple has to review gazillion apps, of course they are going to F up a few every now and then. Why is this news? It would only be news if they didn't F something up for an extended period.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      It's bigger news because the rabid Apple fanbois constantly bore on and on about how safe and secure the Apple walled garden is. An app which does something entirely different depending on who runs it and where seems to indicate that Apple's famed vetting is pretty useless.

      The Apple fanbois were all over a recent Android malware thread where the malware came from a *fake website version of the Play Store*, so you would have to virtually insist on being infected to get it. "Android = trash", they said. "Just

      • by Tailhook ( 98486 )

        seems to indicate that Apple's famed vetting is pretty useless

        That's the quick take, sure. The real story is that it's highly useful, just not for what you're thinking. The primary value is protecting Apple's revenue from competitors that might attempt to forego Apple's app store cut. When that behavior occurs Apple is all over that shit.

        Apple doesn't give a rats as about whatever money there is in pirated foreign movies, so their review process doesn't detect a problem. Thus, another somewhat embarrassing headline, but no meaningful damage, and no one is direc

    • If Apple weren't charging a 30% commission, arguing that it needs this huge sum of money to make sure apps are safe, I'd agree with you. Their entire marketing premise to regulators, is that they need this high fee to keep its customers safe. So they're a victim of their own marketing here.

      • You forget what else they manage:
        - refunds
        - small business accounting
        - VAT, and monthly payment to the tax agency
        - relevant summary documentation for the tax declaration especially VAT, of the vendor

        And probably half a dozen other things.

        • Oh yeah, why didn't I think of all those other *normal* things that an online store has to do! I mean, the going rate for those services is in the neighborhood of 1.5% to 2%. But yeah, they do all that stuff too, so we can knock down their 30% cut to 28%, to make it a fair comparison.

  • Piracy is good for good content and bad for bad content. "Free" is still too expensive for a movie that doesn't make sense directed by a guy who doesn't understand the main character and written for an audience that doesn't exist.

    I grew up reading spider-man and have 2 articles of clothing featuring Venom and yet I've never watched any of the Venom movies. I was a goth spider-man and I never considered checking out the morbius movie. I'm wearing batman socks right now and I never considered watching the Jo
  • However, if you're a user in certain countries, like France or Canada, opening the app shows a collection of pirated movies, such as Venom: The Last Dance, Joker: Folie a Deux, and Terrifier 3.

    So...nothing anyone wants to actually see then.

  • Damned if they do and damned if they don't...
    • Yup. And everyone acts like they have the source to pour over every line. Whoever built the app probably wrote it in such a way that those options are not presented to Apple's reviewers.

      Because, y'know, how hard would that be?

      But no, Apple bad, because Apple!

  • the slashdot audience was entirely in favour of bypassing region locking, c.f. DeCSS.

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