Taking a Bite Out of the Forbidden Fruit: Characterizing Third-Party Iranian iOS App Stores
Amirhossein Khanlari, Amir Rahmati
TLDR
This paper characterizes the underground ecosystem of third-party iOS app stores in Iran, revealing unique apps, piracy, and security risks due to sanctions.
Key contributions
- Presents the first comprehensive empirical study of clandestine Iranian third-party iOS app stores.
- Analyzes over 1700 apps, detailing store operations, distribution, and evasion techniques.
- Uncovers unique Iranian-exclusive apps, widespread piracy, and unauthorized monetization.
- Quantifies developer revenue loss and highlights security/privacy risks from altered binaries.
Why it matters
This paper reveals the significant impact of sanctions and censorship on digital access, creating a unique, risky, and thriving underground app ecosystem. It highlights critical security, privacy, and economic challenges for users and developers.
Original Abstract
Due to U.S. sanctions and strict internet censorship, Iranian iOS users are barred from accessing the Apple App Store and developer services. In response, despite violating Apple's developer terms, a thriving underground ecosystem of third-party iOS app stores has emerged to serve Iranian users. This paper presents the first comprehensive empirical study of these clandestine app stores. We document how these stores operate, including their distribution mechanisms, user authentication processes, and evasion techniques. By collecting and analyzing more than 1700 iOS application packages and their metadata from three major Iranian third-party app stores, we characterize the ecosystem's size, structure, and content. Our analysis reveals a significant presence of Iranian-exclusive apps, widespread distribution of cracked apps, unauthorized monetization of paid content, and embedded third-party tracking and piracy libraries. We also uncover a notable overlap among financial, navigational, and social apps that exist solely in this ecosystem, reflecting the unique digital constraints of Iranian users. Finally, we quantify the potential revenue losses for developers due to piracy and document security and privacy risks associated with altered binaries. Our findings highlight how sanctions, censorship, and enforcement gaps have enabled a parallel app distribution ecosystem with complex socio-technical implications.
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