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Is Apple a Safe Haven or a Money-Grubbing Trojan Horse?

A fake app finds a home in the place Apple argues is safest of all.

Odin Halvorson
2 min readFeb 11, 2024
On the left: a beautiful white gazebo or marble surrounded by greenery. On the right, a trojan horse made up of menacing phrases. The image has been created to visualize the contrast between Apple’s claims of a secure ecosystem and the hidden dangers within, as symbolized by the presence of a fake app in the App Store. This artwork captures the dichotomy between safety and risk in digital marketplaces.

Apple recently had to remove a fake app that looked a lot like the popular password manager LastPass from its App Store.

This app, which was pretending to be the password manager LastPass, was actually a rather bad fake, filled with spelling mistakes and errors that plenty of Apple users caught onto.

Apple usually says its App Store is safe because they check all the apps, but this fake app still got through. They’ve been fighting tooth and nail against new rules that would force better interoperation and ensure that tech giants have a harder time gate-keeping their customers.

Their argument against interoperating, against better pluralism of competition? That allowing other app stores to operate on their devices could make things less safe for users. And yet this fake LastPass app was discovered in Apple’s own store!

This comes at a bad time for Apple as the European Commission has identified six companies — Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, ByteDance, Meta, and Microsoft — as digital “gatekeepers” under the Digital Markets Act (DMA).

Apple and these other tech giants now have six months to comply with DMA obligations, ensuring fair and open digital markets. Since non-compliance could lead to significant fines, up to 20% of worldwide turnover for repeated infringements, this is the first time we’ve seen real teeth emerging from governments against corporate powerhouses like Apple.

Regardless, this latest breach of trust only further highlights how dangerous it is to let any one company dictate terms of access to its users.

We need a comprehensive set of interoperability standards, backed up from strong legal measures.

We need to force companies like Apple into earnestly serving the public’s good… otherwise, they will just continue to serve the public up on a platter for the “good” of their corporate stakeholders.

Hi there! I’m Odin Halvorson, a librarian, independent scholar, film fanatic, fiction author, and tech enthusiast. If you like my work and want to support me, please smash that “clap” button (up to 50 times!) and subscribe! You can also join my newsletter and get free access to the articles I write!

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Odin Halvorson
Odin Halvorson

Written by Odin Halvorson

A futurist/socialist/fantasist writer, editor, and scholar. MFA/MLIS. Free access to my articles at OdinHalvorson.substack.com | More over at OdinHalvorson.com.

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