More Trouble In Apple's App Store
quickOnTheUptake writes in to update the story of foul play in Apple's App Store, which we talked over on Sunday. The Next Web, which broke the story, now provides evidence of rampant App Farms used for theft in the store. Here is a summary of the problems TNW has seen, which includes large-scale break-ins of the App Store accounts of users worldwide. Apple has responded to the initial reports, has disabled the account of the initially fingered rogue developer, and has called on those whose accounts were misused to change their password and credit card. Both TNW and Engadget, at least, believe the problems go far deeper than Apple is admitting.
...oh, like the antenna issue?!
Wait, wasn't this the whole reason Apple wanted to approve apps - so they could keep the garbage out?!
Problems or not, these apple stories are starting to feel like the slashdot version of Orwell's two minutes of hate.
What happened there?
They won't allow flash or 'widgety' apps yet allow apps that do noting but get the developer points.
A developer with almost 5,000 apps?
So much for that 200,000 apps in the apple store.... perhaps half are fake?
Farmville for Developers.
"His name was James Damore."
Nah...that's MS yardstick. If a rogue developer hijacks IE then it's a MS problem. If a rogue developer does something to Appstore then it is that damn rogue developer.
You can bet a dollar to a doughnut that they have some clever verbiage buried deep down in the EULA that removes their responsibility in some meaningful way.
BTW, who the hell is still visiting the crApp Store anyway? I froze my iTouch at 2.2.1 because I refuse to pay another $10 for the elusive Copy/Paste bug they failed to ship, or fix, in my rev. I downloaded all the free games, fart apps, tip computers, and two useful apps back in 2008 and never went back. Not all that impressed with the garden. In fact, it mostly sucks ass. Enjoy at your own peril!
This is the NSA, we're gonna geet U h@x0r5! Also, what is a h@x0r5?
The servers weren't even hacked. 400 accounts with guessable passwords were accessed. That is why the users were asked to change their passwords, and everybody got their money back.
How much hysteria does there have to be around Apple before it's enough?