Does Apple have a ‘zombie app’ problem?

Why did Apple email porn to this man?

While Apple is celebrating six years of App Store action with more than 75 billion app downloads served and over $15 billion paid to developers so far, a new report from app analytics company Adjust says that 80% of apps available in the App Store are “zombie apps,” or apps that aren’t easily discoverable by the users.

According to the company, to qualify as a Zombie App, an app must not rank on any of the 39,171 App Store top lists on two out of three days over the month. While App Store app discovery has been criticized before, it’s not clear what the correlation between Zombie App status and developer revenue is, as the Adjust doesn’t reveal such stats. Similarly, it’s not clear how and why the company chose to measure Zombie App status this way – the requirement for an app to show up in top charts “at least two out of three days over the evaluation period of one month” is not explained.

What’s clear is that, the more apps available in the App Store, the harder it is for them to hit the top app lists. Adjust expects some 578,000 apps to be launched in the following 12 months, with the company also revealing that more than 20% of apps launched since the App Store was first released have been either removed by Apple or by developers – the so-called “Dead Apps.”

Since the Apple Store was launched, 1.6 million apps were uploaded in total. Of those, there are currently 1,252,777 apps available, according to the analytics company.

When unveiling iOS 8 at WWDC 2014, Apple has also demoed various ways through which it hopes to improve app discovery, app beta testing and app bundling.

Similar stats for the Google Play Store or the Amazon Appstore have not been revealed in Adjust’s report, which is available in full at the source link.

More from BGR: 5 awesome tricks that will make your iPhone run much smoother

This article was originally published on BGR.com

Related stories

Leak may reveal crucial details about the iPhone 6′s A8 processor

More than 20 awesome iPhone tricks you've probably never heard of

iPhone 6 is already causing problems for Apple's rivals – and it doesn't even exist yet