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Google Play Sees 47% Decline In Apps Since Start of Last Year (techcrunch.com) 19

Google Play's app marketplace has seen a dramatic 47% drop in available apps -- from 3.4 million to 1.8 million -- since the start of 2024. An analysis by app intelligence provider Appfigures attributes the decline to stricter quality standards, expanded human reviews, and increased enforcement against low-quality and deceptive apps. TechCrunch reports: In July 2024, Google announced it would raise the minimum quality requirements for apps, which may have impacted the number of available Play Store app listings.

Instead of only banning broken apps that crashed, wouldn't install, or run properly, the company said it would begin banning apps that demonstrated "limited functionality and content." That included static apps without app-specific features, such as text-only apps or PDF file apps. It also included apps that provided little content, like those that only offered a single wallpaper. Additionally, Google banned apps that were designed to do nothing or have no function, which may have been tests or other abandoned developer efforts.

Reached for comment, Google confirmed that its new policies were factors here, which also included an expanded set of verification requirements, required app testing for new personal developer accounts, and expanded human reviews to check for apps that try to deceive or defraud users. In addition, the company pointed to other 2024 investments in AI for threat detection, stronger privacy policies, improved developer tools, and more. As a result, Google prevented 2.36 million policy-violating apps from being published on its Play Store and banned more than 158,000 developer accounts that had attempted to publish harmful apps, it said.
TechCrunch also notes that a new trader status rule, which went into effect in the EU this February, could be another contributing factor. It requires developers to display their names and addresses in their app listings, and failure to comply would see their apps removed from EU app stores.

Google Play Sees 47% Decline In Apps Since Start of Last Year

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  • Family Danger (Score:5, Interesting)

    by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Tuesday April 29, 2025 @09:10PM (#65341485)

    I let my developer account get deleted rather than put my family at risk of doxxing, Swatting, and other threats from deranged people. My family is worth more than any amount of money I could possibly make from Google.

    Google wanted to get rid of small developers, so mission accomplished.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Tuesday April 29, 2025 @09:14PM (#65341487)
      I agree that people are absolute dicks to hobbyists. Rather famously there was a girl who wrote a pretty good Sega CD emulator way back in the day before there were legacy emulators commonly available and she disappeared from the net because as she was getting ready to release it, having used it as her College project, a shitload of people piled on with insults and threats.

      Also if you know what bSNES is... The creator of it was trans and bullying push them to suicide.

      So I understand that but is the complaint that Google isn't doing enough to protect creators? I don't recall them requiring you to put your personal name on an app but it's been a while since I wrote anything.
      • Google wants real IDs for ads and such, and shares that info. Honestly, fucking horrible company.

        • Google wants real IDs for ads and such, and shares that info.

          Shares it with who? Not with advertisers. Google doesn't give any user data to advertisers. So who else might they share it with, and why?

        • by Z00L00K ( 682162 )

          Google wants more or less full access to your bank account. Even if you just make free apps that you don't make money from.

      • Remember how mean people here were to Richard M. Stallman?

    • AFAIK it's not a google rule, but an EU rule, that your address is made public. And even then, only if your app is published in the EU. So just don't publish it in the EU. The reason they want that is so that they know who you are if your app fails to censor the truth [translate.goog]. Sure, you might be in the US, which progressives like rsilvergun abhor because people can "hide" behind inalienable rights like those granted by the first amendment, but that fact won't prevent you from being disappeared one day [npr.org] without any w

      • if your app fails to censor the truth [translate.goog].

        What does this article have to do with the "EU"? It discusses the opinion of someone in Sweden about something or other.

        One might just as well pick the opinion of some nutjob from a town hall meeting in South Dakota and pass it around as the law of the land in the country formerly known as "USA". Probably the quote will be much closer to the "official" line, too, now that the Trump States of Amurikah are mostly ruled by decrees.

        because people can "hide" behind inalienable rights like those granted by the first amendment

        The US, where the most basic inalienable right to life is a distant second to th

    • I let my developer account get deleted rather than put my family at risk of doxxing, Swatting, and other threats from deranged people.

      Are you saying Google publishes the addresses and phone numbers of developers? Where is this information found?

    • by Anonymous Coward
      Yup. I delisted my apps when Google forced me to verify my full legal name and actual street address so they can display this info on my apps' listings publicly on the www. I waited until the last few days extended deadline, verified so that I have future options, but delisted my apps. Existing users of free and paid apps will still see this info though.

      I already had previously opted out of selling to users in Japan, because that legally requires publicly listing a phone number. Yeah, no thanks.

      Google
  • Props for being slightly less horrible. Fuck you, Google.

  • by Tony Isaac ( 1301187 ) on Tuesday April 29, 2025 @10:42PM (#65341573) Homepage

    Wasn't it supposed to help Google ensure that users were protected from malware and bad apps?

  • I've had a couple or few games that run really hot when doing apparently sweet ef-a.

    I suspect that they're bitcoin mining, and a decent service for an app store would be to ban apps that do that.

    So if any of you young kids wants to start an app store where devs have to submit their source code and you check it for bitcoin miners, let me know, and I'll join up.

Overdrawn? But I still have checks left!

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