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Google purges 60,000 apps from Play Store

Among the 60,000 apps removed are spam-related and other non-compliant mobile applications. The number represents a record amount removed for the month of February and comes just days before the launch of a revamped version of the marketplace. The Google Play update will be available to users with devices running Android version 2.2 (Froyo) or above.

Many of the apps removed were from the MP3/ringtone category, which may also point to issues with copyright. Nearly 14,000 were removed from the Entertainment category and over 12,000 from the Personalisation category, according to a report from TechCrunch.

Rather than employ people to review applications prior to publishing as Apple does, Google waits until they go onto the Play Store before scanning them. It is thought that Google uses its own search algorithms to weed out unwanted apps. As the number of apps grow in the future so should these algorithms.

Overall, Google officially puts the number of apps available to Android devices at around 700,000. The move comes just before the expected launch of the next version of Android, dubbed Key Lime Pie.

In March, a report by IT security vendor Trend Micro classified 293,091 Android apps as "outright malicious". Although many of these were only available from third party app stores and not from Google Play itself.

Source: IT Pro

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