# Comprehension of Ads-supported and Paid Android Applications: Are They   Different?

**Authors:** Rub\'en Saborido, Foutse Khomh, Yann-Ga\"el Gu\'eh\'eneuc, Giuliano, Antoniol

arXiv: 1703.03017 · 2017-03-10

## TL;DR

This study compares ads-supported and paid Android apps, revealing differences in user preferences, development practices, and resource usage, and proposes models to estimate the costs associated with ads-supported apps.

## Contribution

The paper provides an empirical analysis of 40 Android apps, highlighting key differences and proposing equations to estimate the costs of ads-supported apps.

## Key findings

- Ads-supported apps are preferred by users despite lower ratings.
- Paid apps generally require fewer permissions than ads-supported versions.
- Ads-supported apps consume more resources and are released more frequently.

## Abstract

The Android market is a place where developers offer paid and-or free apps to users. Free apps are interesting to users because they can try them immediately without incurring a monetary cost. However, free apps often have limited features and-or contain ads when compared to their paid counterparts. Thus, users may eventually need to pay to get additional features and-or remove ads. While paid apps have clear market values, their ads-supported versions are not entirely free because ads have an impact on performance.   In this paper, first, we perform an exploratory study about ads-supported and paid apps to understand their differences in terms of implementation and development process. We analyze 40 Android apps and we observe that (i) ads-supported apps are preferred by users although paid apps have a better rating, (ii) developers do not usually offer a paid app without a corresponding free version, (iii) ads-supported apps usually have more releases and are released more often than their corresponding paid versions, (iv) there is no a clear strategy about the way developers set prices of paid apps, (v) paid apps do not usually include more functionalities than their corresponding ads-supported versions, (vi) developers do not always remove ad networks in paid versions of their ads-supported apps, and (vii) paid apps require less permissions than ads-supported apps. Second, we carry out an experimental study to compare the performance of ads-supported and paid apps and we propose four equations to estimate the cost of ads-supported apps. We obtain that (i) ads-supported apps use more resources than their corresponding paid versions with statistically significant differences and (ii) paid apps could be considered a most cost-effective choice for users because their cost can be amortized in a short period of time, depending on their usage.

## Full text

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## Figures

9 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.03017/full.md

## References

17 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.03017/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/1703.03017