Ahead of Apple’s big iPhone event later this week, the company appears to be grappling with a PR problem: Third-party apps on both its desktop and mobile app stores have been caught doing shady stuff. Last week, Apple pulled a top selling app from the App Store, a month after it was alerted about it, but only hours after it started making headlines. Since then, tens of new iOS apps have been caught indulging in a similar offense — collecting and selling users data such as GPS coordinates, WiFi network IDs and more. Amid all of this, more desktop apps, curiously all from security service provider Trend Micro — have been caught collecting browser history and information about users’ computers. Apple has pulled Trend Micro’s apps from the store. Do note that Trend Micro still has some apps — both for desktop and mobile — listed on the store. Would be interesting to learn what sort of conversations Trend Micro and Apple have had in the recent days. BleepingComputer: The apps are Dr. Antivirus, Dr. Cleaner, and Dr. Unarchiver, all under the developer account Trend Micro, Incorporated. Until removal, all products were top-sellers, with thousands of positive reviews that averaged their ratings between 4.6 and 4.9. The first public report of a Trend Micro product in the App Store engaging in shady activities came in late 2017 when user PeterNopSled told Malwarebytes forum members that “that his Mac was taken over by Open Any Files: RAR Support,” and it did not let him open Word or Excel files. As security researcher Mikko Hypponen notes, “Bad day for Trend Micro. Most of their Mac OS X apps have been kicked out by Apple after it was discovered they were collecting and sending out private information.”

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