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  • Sikh volunteers hangs a board reading 'Tiktok is prohibited here' at the Golden Temple in Amritsar on February 10, 2020. (Photo by NARINDER NANU / AFP) (Photo by NARINDER NANU/AFP via Getty Images)

    India has banned TikTok, WeChat and many other Chinese apps

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    06.29.2020

    The government cited citizen concerns over privacy and data security.

  • Google

    Stadia hits Google's Play Store ahead of its debut this month

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    11.08.2019

    Google is set to flip the switch on its Stadia game streaming service this month. While you can play through Chrome or your TV (with Chromecast Ultra), you'll also be able to run games like Destiny 2 and Assassin's Creed: Odyssey on some Pixel devices. To help you get ready for the big day on November 19th, Google has added the Stadia app to the Google Play Store.

  • Omar Marques/SOPA Images/LightRocket via Getty Images

    'SimBad' Android adware was downloaded nearly 150 million times

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    03.13.2019

    As much as Google has done to keep malware out of the Play Store, some notable examples still get through. Google has pulled 210 apps from the store after Check Point researchers discovered that they were infected with the same strain of adware. Nicknamed "SimBad" based on the abundance of infected simulator games, the code hid in a bogus ad-serving platform and created a back door that could install rogue apps, direct users to scam websites and show other apps in stores. Check Point believes the apps' developers were tricked into using the platform.

  • REUTERS/Dado Ruvic

    Google pulls 29 photo apps that stole pictures and promoted scams

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    02.02.2019

    Google still has to deal with malicious Android apps slipping through the cracks despite improvements in its screening technology, and some of the offenders are worse than others. Case in point: the company recently pulled 29 camera and photo apps from the Play Store after it became clear they were meant to push intrusive ads, scam users and even steal content. Multiple apps will push full-screen ads, including porn, and some will use the opportunity to run phishing scams that steal your personal info under the guise of contests. Another group of camera apps were ostensibly meant to beautify your photos, but really just stole the uploaded pictures and gave users a fake update prompt.

  • Google

    Google pulled 'millions' of junk Play Store ratings in one week

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    12.18.2018

    Google is just as frustrated with bogus app reviews as you are, and it's apparently bending over backwards to improve the trustworthiness of the feedback you see. The company instituted a system this year that uses a mix of AI and human oversight to cull junk Play Store reviews and the apps that promote them, and the results are slightly intimidating. In an unspecified recent week, Google removed "millions" of dodgy ratings and reviews, and "thousands" of apps encouraging shady behavior. There are a lot of attempts to game Android app reviews, in other words.

  • Engadget

    Massive ad scam stole millions through Android apps

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    10.24.2018

    Google is clamping down on a fraudulent advertising network of over 125 Android apps and websites that have stolen hundreds of millions in ad dollars. A BuzzFeed report laid bare the huge scale of the scheme, which saw scammers from "We Purchase Apps" acquire established apps from developers, transferring them to a web of front and shell companies in Cyprus, Malta, British Virgin Islands, Israel, and Bulgaria.

  • Twitter

    Twitter Lite is now available in 21 more countries

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    08.13.2018

    Many of us want to engage with the rest of the global society, whether we live in major cities with blazing fast mobile connections or areas where data is prohibitively expensive or slow. To help bridge the gap for those in the latter regions, Twitter released its Lite app, which also takes up far less space on devices than the full Twitter app (the install size is just 3MB).

  • Engadget

    Did you know that Google Search on Android is a podcast player?

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    04.24.2018

    Whether you're listening to the newest installment of a daily podcast you're subscribed to or binging the latest true crime series, being able to pause a podcast on one device and pick it back up on another is a useful feature. And according to Pacific Content, it's a feature that Google offers right now. If you start an episode on your Android phone, for example, you can finish it with your Google Home, and Zack Reneau-Wedeen, Google's podcasts product manager, says this "device interoperability" will eventually expand to everything on which you use Google. We asked Google about the feature and were told that it's "not new" but it's unclear how long the ability has been around.

  • Google

    The Google Play store is now selling audiobooks

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    01.23.2018

    The Google Play Store has sold just about every media type for years now, but there's one more category the company is getting into as of today: audiobooks. As a leaked image revealed a few days ago, audiobooks are now on sale from Google Play in 45 countries and nine languages. As with most other Google services, audiobooks are available on pretty much any device you would want to use: Android, iOS, the web and Google Home speakers. To play a book on your phone, you'll need to download the Google Play Books app, which until now has focused on text-only options.

  • Getty Images/iStockphoto

    Some mobile games are listening to what children watch

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    12.29.2017

    Just in time for the new season of Black Mirror, another report of a company using smartphones to listen in on users has surfaced. The New York Times reported this week that a number of apps are using software produced by a startup called Alphonso and it uses a smartphone's microphone to listen for particular audio signals in TV shows, advertisements and movies. In many cases, Alphonso then has Shazam identify what those audio snippets are and all of the collected data can then be sold to advertisers who can use it to better target their ads.

  • Google

    Google Play sale serves up 99 cent movie and TV show rentals

    by 
    Saqib Shah
    Saqib Shah
    12.22.2017

    If you've been putting off renting a film, buying an app, or downloading an ebook, you'll be glad to hear that it's sale time on the Google Play Store (again). That means all movie rentals now cost a buck, and the same goes for three episodes from TV programs, giving you the perfect excuse to watch the stinkers you missed at the cinema (like bonkers sci-fi headrush Valerian), and the shows you've yet to binge. What's more you can dive in to some peak drama with 50 percent off HBO Now for the first three months for new subscribers.

  • Shutterstock / Twin Design

    Netflix’s DVD queue app is available on Android

    by 
    Mallory Locklear
    Mallory Locklear
    10.25.2017

    Earlier this year, Netflix released a new app that allows users to manage their DVD queues. That feature had previously been available on Netflix apps until an update in 2011 removed it, but surprisingly the now separate DVD portion of Netflix is still profitable and used by around four million people. So while it may have seemed like a "why now" sort of move, it apparently made sense with so many people still choosing to rent DVDs. However, that app was released in January and only for iOS and it has taken until now for the company to release an Android version.

  • Google

    Google Play lets you test drive Android apps before installing them

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.19.2017

    Google's Instant Apps are available in a few places for curious Android users, but they've been conspicuously absent in one place: the Play Store. Wouldn't you want to check out an app before committing to it? You can now. Google is now building Instant Apps into the store through a "Try It Now" button on app pages. Tap it and you can find out if an app is your cup of tea without the usual rigamarole of downloading it first. Only a handful of apps are explicitly labeled as Instant Apps-ready (the New York Times' crossword game is one example), but we'd expect that list to grow before long.

  • AOL

    Google’s Play Store will boost rankings of high quality apps

    by 
    David Lumb
    David Lumb
    08.03.2017

    With thousands of apps added every day, Google's Play Store is bloated with poor-quality software. We're not just talking about lame game knockoffs -- lots of the worst are badly-coded monstrosities that crash often and drain your battery. To keep them off the top of app lists, Google has overhauled its search and discovery algorithms to take quality into account and downrank bad apples into oblivion.

  • AOL

    Google now lets developers offer sales on Android apps

    by 
    Derrick Rossignol
    Derrick Rossignol
    02.28.2017

    During Google's Developer Day at GDC 2017 today, the company introduced a few new features that will benefit both developers and consumers on the Google Play Store. The one customers will notice most starting today is strikethrough pricing, which makes it more obvious when apps are being sold at a reduced rate.

  • Google gets better at spotting bogus Play Store app installs

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    10.31.2016

    It'd bad enough when you download a crummy Android app, but it's worse when you're tricked into installing that app thanks to fake installs and other tricks that make it seem more popular than it is. Google wants to fix that: it's deploying upgraded detection and filtering tech that should do a better job of catching installs meant solely to pump up an app's placement in the Play Store. Developers won't immediately get the boot if they're caught (rookie developer may not fully understand the rules), but those who make a habit of rigging the system could lose their app presence.

  • Google pushes Android Wear 2.0 back to early 2017

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    09.29.2016

    If you're champing at the bit waiting for your chance to try Android Wear 2.0 this fall, you're about to be disappointed. As part of the launch of a third Developer Preview, Google has revealed that the overhaul of its wearable platform won't officially reach smartwatches until early 2017. There should be at least one more preview release between then and now. It's more than a little unfortunate for smart wristwear fans, although it might be worth the wait given what Google is adding today.

  • Google brings Family Library sharing to the Play Store

    by 
    Andrew Dalton
    Andrew Dalton
    07.27.2016

    The Google Play Store's rumored Family Library feature officially goes live today with expanded sharing options for all of your apps, movies, TV shows and books. With a little bit of setup, your Google Play Store purchases are now available across every device in your household.

  • The Google Play Store family plan is reportedly ready to launch

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    07.13.2016

    Late last year, Google took its first step towards letting users share their purchased media with family members. The initial foray was a family plan for Google Play Music, which let multiple family members stream music for $14.99 a month. But now, it seems that Google is going to let users share movies, TV shows, book and apps as well. According to Gizmodo, Google's family plan will let you share all media purchased from the Play Store with five other family members, though purchased music isn't part of the deal. The family "manager" will be able to control what other members can access and what they won't be able to see.

  • Android apps will unlock the full potential of Chromebooks

    by 
    Nathan Ingraham
    Nathan Ingraham
    07.07.2016

    For me, the most exciting announcement at Google I/O in May wasn't even mentioned in the opening-day keynote. During the second day of the conference, Google dropped some rather big news: The Play Store and Android apps will come to Chromebooks later this year. As someone who's been a big Chrome OS believer for years now, I was quite pleased at the notion of having more apps and better offline capabilities. It's just what the platform needs to fully move past its "glorified browser" reputation. While the Play Store won't officially come to Chromebooks until the fall, there is a way to give it a shot today. If you install the Chrome developer channel on the ASUS Chromebook Flip, you can try Android apps out now. I've spent the past few weeks seeing how much running Android on a Chromebook changes the experience of using the platform -- for good and for bad.