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Pirated Movie App Disguised as Vision Test Snuck Onto App Store

A vision testing app named "Kimi" with a not-so-hidden pirated movie feature recently made its way past Apple's review team, ultimately reaching number eight on the list of top free entertainment apps.

kimi app
As reported by The Verge, Kimi's App Store listing claimed that it was an app that "tests your eyesight," but when downloaded and installed, it opened right up to a clear TV show and movie interface for downloading and watching pirated content. There was no attempt to hide the app's true purpose behind some kind of vision test interface, which begs the question of how it made its way past the ‌App Store‌ review team.

The ‌App Store‌ description mentioned comparing two pictures as an eyesight test, watching scenery, and playing games, but none of those features were present in the app.

For an app focused on pirated content, Kimi had a fleshed out feature set. It offered top movies, search options, recommended suggestions, games, and more, with ads included for monetization purposes. The app was first approved in September, and it was available for several months in the iOS and macOS App Stores without Apple noticing.

Apple pulled the app this morning after The Verge wrote about it, and it is no longer available.

This is the second time in the last week that Apple's ‌App Store‌ has made headlines for questionable app approval. Last Thursday, popular password management app LastPass raised the alarm about a fake "LassPass" app that was imitating its design and feature set. Apple pulled the app about a day after the news was shared on media sites.

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Top Rated Comments

28 months ago
Maybe it was intended to test the vision of the App store team… they were found not to be vision pros 🤔
Score: 78 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Populus Avatar
28 months ago
If something as evident as this made its way to the App Store, who knows what else could be hidden on other apps…
Score: 51 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Nermal Avatar
28 months ago
I wonder whether this might have been an app effectively wrapping a website. Have a "clean" website when the app's being reviewed, and then swap it out to the other one once it's passed approval. It wouldn't be the first time a developer's pulled that sort of stunt.

Or it could be total incompetence...
Score: 39 Votes (Like | Disagree)
erikkfi Avatar
28 months ago

There needs to be accountability. They know who clicked "Approve". That person needs to be brought in for their own review and enhanced training.

Apple should publish this type of info — "Johnny B. approved this app on March 7, 2023". Put the name out there for the public to see.
What...? You're advocating Apple routinely doxx their own employees just in case one makes a mistake, so that we can all see exactly who, by name, to blame instead of the trillion-dollar company setting strict performance metrics on review times?
Score: 29 Votes (Like | Disagree)
28 months ago
I wonder what/who is to blame here. Does Apple place an unrealistic goal of apps per day on their testers or did one of these folks wake up one day feeling a little lazy?

It has to be tough managing this at scale but Apple needs to do a better job. These optics are horrible.
Score: 22 Votes (Like | Disagree)
28 months ago
EDIT: taking a closer look at the screenshots it’s obviously a web app, clearly they pulled the old switcharoo after getting approved

I seriously doubt that’s how the app looked like when it got into the hands of the review team

It’s super trivial to have a server side flag that you can toggle at any time that could kick your user interface into a whole separate hierarchy of view controller if said flag is true

I’m willing to bet if you had downloaded this app and disconnected from the internet before launching it it would have kicked you into the vision test UI
Score: 14 Votes (Like | Disagree)
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