Apple’s App Store, Google Play Delisted Over 8 Lakh Apps Over Lack of Privacy Policy, Other Factors: Report

As per the report, most of the apps delisted from Google Play and App Store were targeted at children up to 12 years.

Advertisement
By Jasmin Jose | Updated: 20 September 2021 15:56 IST
Highlights
  • 27 percent of the delisted apps had access to GPS coordinates
  • 19 percent of the apps could access the camera
  • 60 percent of delisted Google apps had at least one ‘dangerous permission

Photo Credit: Unsplash

Apple and Google have delisted over 813,000 apps from their respective app stores in the first half of this year, as per the H1 2021 Delisted Mobile Apps Report by Pixalate. Pixalate, a California-based fraud protection, privacy, and compliance analytics platform analysed more than five million mobile apps across App Store and Google Play and found out that 15 percent of the total apps were delisted in the first half of the year. Various factors contributed to the apps' delisting, including app store policy breach or the developer's withdrawal. The delisted apps can remain installed on a device even after the app has been removed from the app stores and this has been a cause of concern for consumers. The analysis was aimed to help developers and advertisers to recognise potential threats of privacy and compliance breaches.

Prior to delisting, the apps were downloaded over nine billion times on the Google Play store and the apps on Apple's App Store had over 21 million user ratings. As per the report, 86 percent of the apps delisted from Google Play and 89 percent of the apps delisted from App Store were targeted at children up to 12 years old. It was also noted that 25 percent of the Play Store apps and 59 percent of the App Store apps had no privacy policy detected. The report also said that 26 percent of the apps were delisted from the Russian Google Play store and 60 percent of the apps listed on China's App Store had no detectable privacy policy.

There were several reasons why the apps got delisted. About 66 percent of the delisted Google apps had at least one “dangerous permission.” According to Android for Developers, dangerous permissions — also known as runtime permissions — gives an app additional access to restricted data, and allows the app to perform restricted actions that more substantially affect the system and other apps. About 27 percent of the delisted apps had access to GPS coordinates and 19 percent of the apps could access the camera. Some apps were also delisted because of an app store policy breach or due to the developer's withdrawal.

Advertisement

A point of concern to both advertisers and consumers alike is that the delisted apps can remain installed on a device even after the app has been removed from the app store. If an app was removed following an app store policy violation, this poses an increased risk to consumer safety and privacy, and brand safety for the advertisers.

Advertisement

The goal of the report was to help developers and advertisers recognise potential threats of privacy and compliance breaches.


This week on Orbital, the Gadgets 360 podcast, we discuss iPhone 13, new iPad and iPad mini, and Apple Watch Series 7 — and what they mean to the Indian market. Orbital is available on Apple Podcasts, Google Podcasts, Spotify, Amazon Music and wherever you get your podcasts.
Affiliate links may be automatically generated - see our ethics statement for details.
 

Get your daily dose of tech news, reviews, and insights, in under 80 characters on Gadgets 360 Turbo. Connect with fellow tech lovers on our Forum. Follow us on X, Facebook, WhatsApp, Threads and Google News for instant updates. Catch all the action on our YouTube channel.

Advertisement
Popular Mobile Brands
  1. Cloudflare Is Down Again For the Second Time in Weeks: See Affected Sites
  2. Nothing Phone 3a Lite Goes on Sale in India at This Price
  3. ACT Fibernet Launches New Broadband Plans With Free OTT Subscriptions
  4. OnePlus 15R Surfaces on Benchmarking Site Ahead of India Launch
  5. HMD 101, HMD 100 With Built-In Radio Launched in India at These Prices
  6. Flipkart Buy Buy 2025 Sale: Nothing Phone 3, Phone 3a Deals Revealed
  7. OTT Releases of the Week (Dec 1 – Dec 7): Know What to Watch
  8. Instamart to Provide 10-Minute Delivery of Samsung Galaxy Devices
  9. Airtel Discontinues These Prepaid Recharge Packs in India
  10. NotebookLM App Now Has an In-Built Camera
  1. Google’s Year in Search 2025: Top Trending Topics in India—From Gemini to Squid Games
  2. Vivo S50 Colour Options, Key Features Surface Online; Could Launch in India as Vivo V70
  3. Cloudflare Outage Blocks Access to Several Websites Including BookMyShow, SpaceX, Coinbase
  4. Samsung Galaxy S26 Series to Offer Built-In Support for Company's 25W Magnetic Qi2 Charger: Report
  5. Airtel Discontinues Two Prepaid Recharge Packs in India With Data Benefits, Free Airtel Xtreme Play Subscription
  6. Samsung Galaxy Phones, Devices Are Now Available via Instamart With 10-Minute Instant Delivery
  7. NotebookLM App Gets an In-Built Camera, Lets Users Upload Images as a Source
  8. HMD 101 Launched in India With 1,000mAh Battery, Auto Call Recording Alongside HMD 100: Price, Features
  9. Crypto Traders Await US Fed Signals as Bitcoin Price Drops to $91,900
  10. Nothing Phone 3a Lite Goes on Sale in India: See Price, Offers, Availability
Gadgets 360 is available in
Download Our Apps
Available in Hindi
© Copyright Red Pixels Ventures Limited 2025. All rights reserved.