

- Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store update#
- Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store software#
- Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store code#
- Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store download#
“iPhone users can continue to use the mobile web version of HERE Maps under m., offering them location needs, such as search, routing, orientation, transit information and more, all completely free of charge.” “We have made the decision to remove our HERE Maps app from the Apple App Store because recent changes to iOS 7 harm the user experience,” Nokia said in a statement following a report from Indian Express. Now, Nokia confirmed that it has pulled HERE Maps off of the App Store completely and it blamed iOS 7 for the decision to do so. A few months later, Nokia’s mapping boss quit as the app continued to flounder.
Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store download#
Two weeks later, HERE Maps slipped out of the top-1000 free apps on the iOS app download charts. While the world waited for Google Maps to make its triumphant return to iOS, Nokia beat Google to the punch and released HERE Maps, an iOS port of its fantastic mapping app for Windows Phone, and it looked like the company might have new life as a cross-platform service provider. Google’s mapping solution had been ousted from Apple’s mobile devices and the Cupertino-based company rushed out its own Maps app in its place. Nokia’s HERE Maps application for iOS burst onto the scene back in late 2012 amid the drama that was unfolding around Apple’s iOS mapping app debacle.
Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store software#
While Apple did not disclose which apps were pulled from its virtual shelves, the list was reported to include software capable of blocking ads from appearing inside other applications such as Facebook. But unfortunately was then pulled from the App Store a few hours later.
Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store code#
The greatest concern is malicious code isn't something a developer would try to publicize (like Leung did with Hottest Girls), because that would result in getting caught and thus failing to steal users' information. Third, a malicious app can steal your address book contacts. And a harmful photo app could snap photos with a user's camera even when the user is not pressing the shutter button. But a few areas where users' privacy can be violated include audio, the camera and the address book.įor example, a malicious audio app could potentially allow a developer to record a user’s conversations without him or her knowing. Jonathan Zdziarski, author of the book iPhone Forensics: Recovering Evidence, Personal Data, and Corporate Assets, explained to that the iPhone's API is mostly secure. Prohibited content such as porn and dirty words are only a minor concern compared to the idea of a developer updating his approved app to later include malicious code. Hottest Girls is another example of a developer who tricked the gatekeeper - but only temporarily. There are currently more than 50,000 apps in the App Store, according to Apple, and the role of gatekeeper will get more difficult as the App Store continues to expand.

In that same article, we highlighted the issue that Apple doesn't have the manpower to police the entire App Store.

In May, reported on a developer who was able to sneak profanity into his karaoke app Lyrics by hiding it in an Easter egg, easily unlocked with a secret code (swiping downward three times in the app).
Weathersnoop pulled from apple app store update#
More interestingly, Hottest Girls reveals a vulnerability in the App Store: Developers can update their apps with prohibited content and cross their fingers that Apple won't notice.
