Google Play Removes Iran’s AC19 App
Google Play Removes Iran’s AC19 App
As part of measures to stem the spread of coronavirus in the country, the Iranian government released an Android app named AC19 intended to help people self-diagnose rather than going to a hospital, but that app was booted from Google Play Store recently, a report said.

TEHRAN (Iran News) – As part of measures to stem the spread of coronavirus in the country, the Iranian government released an Android app named AC19 intended to help people self-diagnose rather than going to a hospital, but that app was booted from Google Play Store recently, a report said.

The AC19 app on Google Play Store “tries to reach a clinical decision by asking a few medical questions,” its description says.

According to a report carried by ZDNet, Google pulled it from its app store this week over claims “that it could detect COVID-19 infections, something that is impossible through an app.”

The app, which is still available through the web, initially faced concerns that it was as a means of “spying on people”. But a malware researcher ZDNet worked with, Lukas Stefanko, examined the app and found nothing to indicate it was spying on people.

“The app is not a malicious Trojan or spyware,” he said. Though it asks for permissions, he said those permissions are nothing beyond what you would grant any other health-based app.

The answer for the move by Google appears to be more simple than that: Iranian developer accounts aren’t allowed on Google Play, according to public terms of service statements from Google.

  • source : Tasnim, Irannews