Apple has approved 1 million apps, according to data firm

Apple has approved 1 million apps, according to data firm

The milestone Apple won't announce

Apple has approved over 1 million apps for its iOS App Store according to app discoverability firm Appsfire.

Appsfire co-counder Ouriel Ohayon told The Next Web that by his company's numbers Apple has reached the 1 million app milestone, which includes 493,298 paid app submissions.

It isn't a milestone Apple is likely to publicize any time soon though, as those numbers are only for app approvals.

The actual number of live apps sits at 736,247 according to Ohayon, with 336,270 paid apps available.

Mind the copyright

The discrepancy is due to a large number of apps approved by Apple and later removed by their creators, typically for copyright reasons.

That means an estimated 264,753 apps, over a quarter of all apps submitted to the app store, have been pulled from the App Store since its creation in 2008, including 157,028 paid apps.

The numbers do not speak very highly for Apple's approval process, which has become somewhat notorious for passing apps which blatantly infringe copyrights.

While Apple is often quick to react and remove infringing apps from the App Store, as indicated by over 264K approved apps that are no longer available, Apple has yet to address its approval process that lets the offending apps pass in the first place.

The race to 1 million

Earlier this year at the iPad mini and iPad 4 launch event Apple announced the App Store had reached 700,000 apps.

The company has always been forthcoming with the number of live apps available or the number of app downloads through the App Store, but is far quieter when it comes to the App Store approval process.

Last month Google announced that it is catching up to Apple, reaching 700,000 apps available through the Google Play store.

The next milestone will be to reach 1 million apps available, with both Google and Apple racing for that title. However, it is also helpful to get a reminder that those numbers can be deceiving, with thousands of approved illegitimate apps that must be moderated and removed from the services.


Source : techradar[dot]com

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