Google recently pulled the Chinese-owned Pinduoduo app off of its Google Play App Store after malware was found on a Chinese version of the app.
“Off-Play versions of this app that have been found to contain malware have been enforced on via Google Play Protect,” the Google Play spokesperson said in an emailed statement on Tuesday.
Though Google Play hasn’t found the malware on the version of the app distributed through its app store, the technology and search engine company is preventing users from downloading “Off-Play” versions of the app on devices that use Google Play. Google also decided to suspend the Play Store version of the app while it continues to scrutinize the app.
“Google Play Protect enforcement has been set to block installation attempts of these identified malicious apps,” the Google Play spokesperson said. “Users that have malicious versions of the app downloaded to their devices are warned and prompted to uninstall the app. We have suspended the Play version of the app for security concerns while we continue our investigation.”
Pinduoduo is an e-commerce website developed by the Shanghai-based PDD Holdings. Pinduoduo’s e-commerce service is primarily used as a way for farmers to sell their agricultural products. PDD Holdings has also developed the Temu e-commerce service.
“Google Play has informed us this morning that Pinduoduo App has been temporarily suspended as the current version is not compliant with Google’s Policy, but has not shared more details,” a Pinduoduo spokesperson said in an emailed statement.
PDD Holdings’ shares fell 1.8 percent in premarket trading on Tuesday amid news of the app’s suspension on the Google Play Store.
NTD News reached out to Apple, which runs the App Store service that offers versions of popular apps that are compatible with its iOS operating system. Apple did not respond to the request for comment before this article was published. An iOS version of the Pinduoduo app was still listed on the Apple App Store as of Tuesday afternoon.