In fact, Apple has removed fake, copycat, cheap, and junk applications from the App Store for a period of time, including "TempleJump" that imitates "TempleRun" and "Plants vs. Zombie" that imitates "Plants vs. Zombies" 》.
As early as 2010, Apple sent an email stating that it had begun to crack down on software name squatting. Apple had strengthened the review of AppStore listings and only registered application names. If no code was submitted within 90 days, the code would still be registered in the next 30 days. If the software is not submitted, Apple will delete the registration record of the software name and allow other developers to use it.
The "Apple AppStore Review Guidelines" states: "Using protected third-party materials (trademarks, copyrights, trade secrets, other private content) requires a text copyright confirmation when applying."
Despite relevant measures taken by Apple, incidents of copycat applications and fake registrations still exist in the AppStore. The reason may be that before 2010, Apple’s review of new applications on the AppStore was not as good as it is now. are as strict as before, but the current measures are more aimed at newly launched applications. For existing copycat applications and fake registration behaviors, program loopholes may appear during the review.