Android 14 will start blocking the installation of apps that target outdated versions of Android to help reduce the potential for malware.
According to a newly posted code change, Android 14 is set to make API requirements stricter, entirely blocking the installation of outdated apps, reports 9to5Google.
This modification would prevent users from sideloading specific APK files and would also prevent app stores from installing those same apps.
Initially, Android 14 devices will only block apps that specifically target older Android versions.
However, Google intends to gradually raise the threshold to Android 6.0 (Marshmallow), with a mechanism in place to "progressively ramp it up", according to the report.
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Although, it will probably still be up to device makers to determine the threshold for outdated apps or whether to enable them at all.
The tech giant intends to reduce the spread of malware apps on Android by blocking these outdated apps, said the report.
The report further mentioned that the developer who made the change notes that some malware apps have purposefully targeted older versions of Android in order to circumvent certain protections that are only enforced on newer apps.
Meanwhile, Google said that the upcoming Android 14 will "support our partners in enabling all of this" after SpaceX and T-Mobile unveiled plans to deliver direct satellite connectivity to smartphones.
On Twitter, Hiroshi Lockheimer, Senior Vice President of Platforms and Ecosystems at Google, described how it "was a stretch to get 3G + Wifi working" on the first shipping Android phone (HTC Dream/T-Mobile G1) in 2008".
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(Only the headline and picture of this report may have been reworked by the Business Standard staff; the rest of the content is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)