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This happened on ios for me years ago. I had two apps that radically changed their business model (owner?) through updates with no recourse. I had an app called gas cubby, which let me locally - on the phone - keep track of all my vehicles. I could enter detailed information about each car such as year, make, model, vin, insurance policy, gas purchases, oil changes and the like. It would tell you gas mileage and remind you of upcoming maintenance.
One day, I updated the app and all my local data was uploaded to the cloud. Another app I updated was camscanner from tencent that basically did the same thing. Think of all the PDFs you scan going to their cloud. |
A while back, I was approached by a [NATION OBFUSCATED] developer, asking to buy up one of my older apps (they are all open-source).
I ignored the request, and reported the approach to Apple, as I'm sure that this actor has been doing the same for many other apps.
This is apparently a common method for malware-slingers. They buy established, older apps, that they assume the developer has abandoned (I hadn't abandoned it, but it's a simple app that hardly ever needs tweaking. If I stop supporting an app, I remove it from the store).
They then "update" the app, with a little "extra flavoring."