No. For example, the developer will reply "We are sorry for the infringement of your intellectual property rights, and we hope to communicate with you to resolve the dispute as soon as possible." Once the developer casually replies and admits the infringement, the initiative will be completely in the hands of the complainant. , once the complainant's requirements cannot be met, the company will remove the software. In this case, many developers will pay higher amounts of compensation.
1. Unfair competition occurs when rankings are faked. Competitors help software to fake rankings and then report to Apple after obtaining evidence. This can easily lead to the software being removed from the shelves.
2. If the software is complained to have obvious traces of copycat imitation, or otherwise infringes upon the legitimate rights and interests of others, Apple will also remove the corresponding App from the shelves after investigation and evidence collection. In November 2012, Netdisk was removed from the shelves by many markets, mainly due to trademark infringement. Because the 115 trademark is not owned by Guangdong Wu Technology Co., Ltd., the developer of 115 network disk, the 115 application was removed from the store after receiving an official letter from the 115 registered trademark owner to delete the infringing software.