Chinese social media went a-flutter at this photo of an apparent App Store clickfarmer

This year-old photo of a woman seated at a wall of Iphones went viral on Chinese social media, where it was identified as a clickfarmer whose job is to repeatedly install apps on multiple phones in order to inflate their App Store ranks.

The service — which puts your app into the top 10 free apps — reportedly costs about $11,000 in upfront costs, and $65,000/week for maintenance. Dozens of vendors advertise comparably priced services on China's Taobao marketplace.

For many years, friends who work in app development have muttered darkly about the manipulation of Apple and Google's stores, saying that the largest companies have sewn up the top ten rankings by paying for huge stables of clickfarmers — and indeed, the same handful of firms have dominated those top ten boards almost since their inception.

The original photo was tweeted on Weibo with the caption, "Hard-working App Store ranking manipulation employee." Apple tries to prevent PC-based iPhone emulation programs (bots) made for this purpose and bans apps that use them, so manual labor is the best way to ensure the closest simulation of actual users. A search for "app store ranking manipulation" (刷榜 app store) on Taobao, China's most popular C2C ecommerce site, reveals dozens upon dozens of vendors selling similar services. Their prices are listed as one yuan, but it's more likely that the real negotiations take place through direct chat.

A viral photo in China shows how to manipulate App Store rankings the hard way

[Paul Bischoff/Tech In Asia]





(via JWZ)