Skip to main content

Google insists it’s doing what it can to purge Play Store of malicious apps

Google still faces accusations of being lax with security when it comes to keeping malicious apps off its Play Store, but it says that in the last few years it has been increasing its efforts to ensure the safety of its digital distribution outlet.

In a post on the Android Developers Blog this week, Google Play product manager Andrew Ahn said that in 2018 the company worked on enhancing its abuse detection technologies and machine learning systems, while at the same time expanding its team of product managers, engineers, policy experts, and operations leaders to tackle nefarious app developers.

Recommended Videos

Ahn said the extra effort resulted in a 55-percent increase in rejections of app submissions compared to 2017, while malicious apps that did get through were spotted and removed more quickly than ever before — often before anyone even had a chance to install them.

“These increases can be attributed to our continued efforts to tighten policies to reduce the number of harmful apps on the Play Store, as well as our investments in automated protections and human review processes,” the product manager wrote in the post.

Google declined to reveal how many dodgy apps it turfed out of the Play Store last year, though we do know that in 2017 the figure reached 700,000, with a sizable 100,000 developers banned from submitting any future apps.

Fifty billion apps scanned every day

Ahn said that besides his team’s work to prevent malicious apps from reaching the Play Store, its Google Play Protect system is also scanning a whopping 50 billion apps on users’ devices each and every day to confirm the safety of the installed software.

“With such protection, apps from Google Play are eight times less likely to harm a user’s device than Android apps from other sources,” Ahn wrote, reminding Android users that downloading apps from third-party stores carries extra risks.

Repeat offenders

The company says it’s continuing to tighten up app rules regarding users’ data and privacy, revealing that in 2018 it removed “tens of thousands” of apps that failed to comply with Play’s policies.

Interestingly, Ahn revealed that more than 80 percent of severe policy violations are made by “repeat offenders and abusive developer networks,” adding that when they’re banned, many simply create new accounts or buy developer accounts on the black market before submitting more apps. However, Google’s improving technology is making it harder for them to operate in this way.

Despite Google’s undoubted efforts, there will always be some malicious apps that are hard to detect. For example, it was cybersecurity firm Trend Micro — not Google — that recently discovered 29 apps in the Play Store that shouldn’t have been there. Some of them sent users to phishing sites or stole users’ photos, and had reportedly been downloaded millions of times before they were thrown out of the store.

Indeed, Ahn admitted the challenge was ongoing: “Despite our enhanced and added layers of defense against bad apps, we know bad actors will continue to try to evade our systems by changing their tactics and cloaking bad behaviors,” he wrote, adding that his team will continue to do all it can “to provide our users with a secure and safe app store.”

Trevor Mogg
Contributing Editor
Not so many moons ago, Trevor moved from one tea-loving island nation that drives on the left (Britain) to another (Japan)…
WhatsApp will soon save you from the horrors of missed texts
Reminders feature in WhatsApp.

Just over a month ago, WhatsApp introduced a new feature that would occasionally nudge users about status story updates from their contacts list. Now, the company has made a subtle change to it and added messages into the fold, as well.

The feature, which is currently rolling out in the test channel with the v2.24.25.29 build on Android, was first spotted by update tracker WABetaInfo. DigitalTrends can confirm that the feature is now live in the latest beta version available via the Google Play Store.

Read more
Google Photos just got its own 2024 year in review. Here’s how to find it
Google Photos' year in review feature for 2024.

Which were your favorite photos taken this year? Rather than going through 12 months of your photo library, Google Photos is making it easier with a new end-of-year feature.  These special recaps are located at the top of the app’s main page through the featured memories carousel on both the iOS and Android Google Photos apps.

As Google explains, the year-in-review tool provides a personalized look at your year through your photos. It includes several categories to highlight different aspects of your year: "Longest streak" shows your longest consecutive days of taking pictures. "Year in smiles" counts the total smiles captured and identifies who you smile with the most. "Your top faces" reveals the people who appeared most frequently in your photos.

Read more
6 excellent iPhone apps that I wish were available on Android
Four iPhone exclusive apps and associated widgets on an iPhone 16 Pro homescreen

For the past 15 years, the way we think about and use technology has been completely reshaped. What was once a hardware-first industry quickly became a software-first one, and this radical evolution of technology can be traced back to one pivotal moment. In 2009, Apple debuted the iPhone 3G and the first App Store. This launch ushered in a new era: the smartphone, complete with apps. It also debuted one of the best commercials, complete with a catchphrase that is sometimes still used today: There’s an app for that.

For many years, the iPhone had a plethora of apps that were not available on Android. While most of these are now available cross-platform, not every developer has embraced the billions of potential customers who don’t have an iPhone. Even now, some apps launch first on iOS and can take months or years to launch on Android.

Read more