Apple’s App Store reviews an average of 100,000 apps per week, of which 40,000 are rejected

Apple CEO Tim Cook said on Monday that Apple has rejected a large percentage of apps on the App Store. Cook believes that the company’s strict supervision is a necessary condition to ensure the safety of the iPhone.

In an interview on Monday’s Sway podcast in The New York Times, Cook pointed out that running an iPhone software store is not easy. ” In any given week, 100,000 apps go into app review,” Cook said, “of which 40,000 are rejected. Most of them are rejected because they are not working properly, or they are not as they say It works like that. You can imagine what would happen to the App Store in a very short time if the review disappeared.”

Kara Swisher, the host of the Sway podcast, then asked why there can be no app stores operated by other companies or organizations. Cook’s answer is to the effect that Apple created the iPhone application ecosystem, and it should profit from it.

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“Apple has helped build an economy of more than half a trillion dollars a year, half a trillion dollars. Compared with the innovations it releases, Apple only uses a small part of it as the cost of operating the store.” Cook said.

Cook is still absolutely opposed to letting users install apps directly. “If you sideload apps, you will break the privacy and security model,” he said. However, he still said that the App Store can be changed. “The App Store is not made of concrete, you know?” He said, “So over time, we have changed.” Cook’s interview with Swisher also covered many other topics, such as Apple Car, augmented reality, Apple TV + and privacy.

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