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Google Play Shows Warning To Anyone Searching For Fortnite APKs (betanews.com)

Mark Wilson quotes a report from BetaNews: The arrival of Fortnite on Android has not only been eagerly awaited, but also steeped in controversy. In addition to making the game a Samsung exclusive (for a few days, anyway), Epic Games decided to bypass Google Play and host APK downloads on its own servers. But this isn't going to stop people looking for Fortnite in the Play Store. Google is well aware of this, and that there is the potential for fake, scam apps to appear, tricking users into downloading something malicious. As such, the company is taking action, and is showing a warning to anyone who searches for Fortnite in Google Play. Conduct a search for Fortnite in Google's app store and you'll be greeted by a message that reads "Fortnite Battle Royale by Epic Games, Inc is not available on Google Play." Searchers are also advised that Fortnite rival PlayerUnknown's Battlegrounds (PUBG) is available to download.

6 of 83 comments (clear)

  1. This actually changed situation for the better by Luckyo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Play store has been utterly flooded with fake Fortnite installers since iphone version release. Everything from malware and (before play store ban) miners to just ad serving garbage.

    Google didn't give a shit. For months. This garbage even popped up on "recommended" list for me a few times.

    And now that Epic actually stated that it isn't publishing on play store, Google finally put a warning on that garbage. Good job Epic for forcing Google to act in some manner, and what the fuck took you so long, oh benevolent overlords at Google?

    1. Re:This actually changed situation for the better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Google can instantly find, block and strike people who mention Alex Jones on Youtube but they cannot get rid of all those apps that are 100% malware. Goes to show where their priorities lie.

    2. Re:This actually changed situation for the better by pots · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Priorities? You mentioned two things there, one super easy: block all instances of "Alex Jones," and one super hard: block all malware. Even if what you said is true (it's not), that still would have nothing to do with priorities.

    3. Re:This actually changed situation for the better by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      Even if what you said is true (it's not)

      It is. H3H3 had their livestream (not even a prerecorded video, it was live) shut down for talking about Alex Jones and they got a strike (community, not copyright) on their channel.

      On the other hand, Google claimed to manually review all apps for violations before they get published, yet here we are.

      So yea, priorities.

  2. Re:Potential for fake, scam, malicious apps? by Opportunist · · Score: 2, Insightful

    No, it's actually about the value of an app store. I, as a user, have no use for an app store if I still have to worry about bogus apps and malware. If I have to deal with that shit, I can as well forgo the appstore. It is basically the main asset such a place is for the user.

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    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  3. Re:Epic is dumb by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think you have that backwards - if you've produced a game that is so popular that malware writers are trying to piggyback on your success to deploy some malware, then it's pretty much a given that it's going to be a financially successful game, which was kind of the point of producing it in the first place. If anything, it's the users that are "doing something wrong" here. Epic has a successful game that is in demand so has opted to handle their own distribution rather than pay Google a cut, so the game simply isn't available on the Google Play store and anything that claims to be so is 100% guaranteed to be pushing ads, malware, cryptominers, or worse. All Google is doing here (finally - this fake-version crap has been going on for ages) is informing users who are unaware of Epic's distribution model - and thus perhaps more likely to be hoodwinked into installing something nasty - that they can't find the app on the store and if they install anything that claims to be Fortnite from the store it's going to be malware.

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