AppHatin’


T-Mobile removes a product that allegedly installed apps on devices without user consent.
AppLovin is a mobile advertising company and has recently come under fire for downloading its advertisers’ apps onto users’ Android devices without their permission. T-Mobile is one of its customers, and allegedly used a product called Array to preload apps on devices. AppLovin shut down Array last month, according to Bloomberg, claiming it was a test product.
The Array product was a test product and was shut down last quarter as it was not economically viable for us. Users never get downloads with any of our products without explicitly requesting it.
AppLovin spokesperson, October 2025
I say the real reason AppLovin stopped isn’t because this tactic is unprofitable. It’s because they got caught.
Ben Edelman, independent researcher and former Harvard professor, October 2025,
T-Mobile may have started uninstalling the com.applovin.array.apphub.tmobile system component to distance itself from the drama that’s engulfing AppLovin.
T-Mobile defends its involvement


T-Mobile users have complained in the past about the carrier installing apps on their devices. | Image Credit – Reddit user nima0003
T-Mobile has defended AppLovin by saying it doesn’t pre-install or install any apps on customer devices without their consent. The carrier says that its work with AppLovin is limited to creating a better advertising experience.
We previously piloted an ad experience with a partner that allowed customers to choose to install apps directly from ads; that pilot has ended.
T-Mobile spokesperson, October 2025
Customers may not necessarily agree. Many subscribers have complained that not only smartphones they financed through T-Mobile come with unwanted apps, but the carrier also downloads apps to their phones without their approval.
A good step
Bloatware is the reason some customers have stopped buying Android phones through a carrier. Since Apple and Google have stricter requirements, iPhones and Pixels are spared from this problem.
Carriers spread out the cost of buying phones over multiple years, making them affordable for buyers who may otherwise not be able to upgrade. Bloatware was said to be an unavoidable nuisance, but with T-Mobile disabling the installer, the situation may improve, assuming AppLovin’s products were the only source of unwanted downloads.

									 
					