iLoungeiLounge
  • News
    • Apple
      • AirPods Pro
      • AirPlay
      • Apps
        • Apple Music
      • iCloud
      • iTunes
      • HealthKit
      • HomeKit
      • HomePod
      • iOS 13
      • Apple Pay
      • Apple TV
      • Siri
    • Rumors
    • Humor
    • Technology
      • CES
    • Daily Deals
    • Articles
    • Web Stories
  • iPhone
    • iPhone Accessories
  • iPad
  • iPod
    • iPod Accessories
  • Apple Watch
    • Apple Watch Accessories
  • Mac
    • MacBook Air
    • MacBook Pro
  • Reviews
    • App Reviews
  • How-to
    • Ask iLounge
Font ResizerAa
iLoungeiLounge
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • News
    • Apple
    • Rumors
    • Humor
    • Technology
    • Daily Deals
    • Articles
    • Web Stories
  • iPhone
    • iPhone Accessories
  • iPad
  • iPod
    • iPod Accessories
  • Apple Watch
    • Apple Watch Accessories
  • Mac
    • MacBook Air
    • MacBook Pro
  • Reviews
    • App Reviews
  • How-to
    • Ask iLounge
Follow US

News › Apps

Apps

iPhone developers: apps cloned, Apple no help (updated x2)

Last updated: May 13, 2021 6:51 am UTC
By Charles Starrett

iPhone developers are dealing with a new threat: duplicates of their applications being approved by Apple, and then released in the App Store as competitors. Citing an Apple Developer Forums thread in which app developers are complaining of their apps being downloaded, copied by other developers, and then re-posted to the store with either the same or very similar names, iLounge reader Zen Ho says that the cloning phenomenon is “being handled unsatisfactorily by Apple.” Ho cites TouchScan, an application cloned by a different developer’s “Touch Scan Pro,” reusing images, sound, and text from the original app; additionally, the developer of iCopter recently watched as both “iCopter Free”—now titled “Copter Free”—and “iCopter Classic” were released, further confusing consumers by using an only slightly modified version of the original iCopter’s logo. Thus far, Apple has been unwilling to help affected developers by removing the impostor applications, says Ho, and instead has told them “to sue the offenders themselves.” Ho sees it as “Apple’s duty to ensure that such plagiarism is rejected in the first place, and to at least take them down upon complaints,” noting that “it is scary to think that anyone developing for the platform can have their business stolen [at] anytime.”


Updated: In an e-mail response to iLounge, the developer of Touch Scan Pro has presented several counter-arguments to the ones made by Ho above.

“I wrote Touch Scan Pro in 38 minutes,” explains Gary Fung, suggesting that due to the trivial time it took to copy Touch Scan, and the lack of originality in the original application’s graphics, name, and concept, all of which he claims were legally unprotectable, “[t]he author of Touch Scan simply cannot expect this amount of effort to earn him a living for the rest of his life.” Fung also claims that he developed the Pro application to make a statement about the lack of value that the original Touch Scan application offered. “I felt that consumers are not getting their $0.99 worth of utility from this app so I wrote one and gave it away for free,” said Fung. “For the first week Touch Scan Pro was free not as a trial or limited time offer.


It was simply free. It was only until Markus started to harass me then I decided to change my mind.” Now Fung is charging the same $1 that he said the original program was not worth.

Update 2: Markus Stöbe, developer of the original Touch Scan, has weighed in with his own e-mail response: “What kind of difference does it make how long it took me to code TouchScan?… And it doesn’t make any difference if he thinks this is not original… it’s my work and hence it is protected by copyright.


Latest News
The 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Chip 16GB RAM/512GB is $250 Off
The 14-inch MacBook Pro with M5 Chip 16GB RAM/512GB is $250 Off
1 Min Read
Noise and Static on AirPods Pro 3 Still Unfixed
Noise and Static on AirPods Pro 3 Still Unfixed
1 Min Read
New iMac with 24-inch OLED Display May be Brighter With 600 Nits
New iMac with 24-inch OLED Display May be Brighter With 600 Nits
1 Min Read
The 15-inch M4 MacBook Air 256GB Is $250 Off
The 15-inch M4 MacBook Air 256GB Is $250 Off
1 Min Read
Internal Kernel Debug Kit from Apple Reveals Tests for a MacBook with A15 Chip
Internal Kernel Debug Kit from Apple Reveals Tests for a MacBook with A15 Chip
1 Min Read
Apple Currently In Talks With Suppliers for Chip Assembly & Packaging of iPhones in India
Apple Currently In Talks With Suppliers for Chip Assembly & Packaging of iPhones in India
1 Min Read
Apple Allows Easier Battery Replacement For M5 MacBook Pro with 14-inch Display
Apple Allows Easier Battery Replacement For M5 MacBook Pro with 14-inch Display
1 Min Read
The Apple Watch SE 3 44mm GPS is $50 Off
The Apple Watch SE 3 44mm GPS is $50 Off
1 Min Read
20th Anniversary iPhone May Launch in Two Years
20th Anniversary iPhone May Launch in Two Years
1 Min Read
Better Image Generation Capabilities and Apple Music Integration Coming to ChatGPT
Better Image Generation Capabilities and Apple Music Integration Coming to ChatGPT
1 Min Read
A20 Pro Chip Coming to Next Gen iPad Mini OLED
A20 Pro Chip Coming to Next Gen iPad Mini OLED
1 Min Read
Amazon has the AirTag 4 Pack Marked $29 off
Amazon has the AirTag 4 Pack Marked $29 off
1 Min Read

iLounge logo

iLounge is an independent resource for all things iPod, iPhone, iPad, and beyond. iPod, iPhone, iPad, iTunes, Apple TV, and the Apple logo are trademarks of Apple Inc.

This website is not affiliated with Apple Inc.
iLounge © 2001 - 2025. All Rights Reserved.
  • Contact Us
  • Submit News
  • About Us
  • Forums
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms Of Use
Welcome Back!

Sign in to your account

Lost your password?