Security

Google's secret to a healthy phone? Remote-controlling your apps

Look Ma, no not much malware!


Google has claimed to have cut Android malware by half.

Figures out of Mountain View this week suggest that the prevalence of PHAs (potentially harmful applications) found on Android 9 Pie devices is half the rate seen in its predecessor. Overall, this has fallen from 0.66 per cent in Lollipop to 0.06 per cent in Pie.

The number is derived from malware detected by Google Play Protect scans, which covers both applications distributed through its Play Store, other app stores, and sideloaded apps. The figures appear in Google's first Android Ecosystem Security Transparency Report.

On average, reckoned Google, only 0.09 per cent of devices that used Google's own Play Store had a piece of malware on board in 2017. That translates to 1.8 million phones.

Click to enlarge

Google attributes the decline in malware to remote control. Since 2017, when the Play Protect scan finds a PHA, it disables it by default: shoot first, ask the user questions ("re-enable or delete?") later.

Google made Play Protect scanning one of the selling points of its Android One programme, which brings order and uniformity to low-end and mid-range 'Droids. Phone makers lose the ability to customise their phones, but buyers get two years of scanning.

(One is not to be confused with Go, which is the low-footprint "Poundland edition" of Android.)

Google said it published the report to increase transparency. But given the regulatory scrutiny of Android, the dominant mobile platform, it also needs to tell a happy story about its governance of the ecosystem – and more specifically, on why it takes a 30 per cent cut of revenues. ®

Send us news
16 Comments

Google One VPN axed for everyone but Pixel loyalists ... for now

Another one bytes the dust

Huawei wants to take homegrown HarmonyOS phone platform worldwide

Chinese tech juggernaut eyes global expansion despite US tech restrictions

Google fires 28 staff after sit-in protest against Israeli cloud deal ends in arrests

Alphabet Workers Union says bosses refuse to listen to concerns

Protest group says Google has fired more staff over sit-ins opposing work for Israel

Group of now-ex Googlers say 50 folks have been let go, vow ongoing protests

Tokyo wags finger at Google for blocking Yahoo Japan<i>!</i> from using ad tech

Seven years of stonewalling and no consequences for advertising giant

Google location tracking deal could be derailed by politics

$62 million settlement plan challenged over payments to progressive nonprofits

UK data watchdog questions how private Google's Privacy Sandbox is

Leaked draft report says stated goals still come up short

Google squashes AI teams together in push for fresh models

You can leave your personal vendettas at home – we have work to do, Pichai warns

Japan turns up heat on Apple, Google with threat of hefty fines

Antitrust proposals could stretch to 30% of annual revenues for law-breaking app store monopolies

Google laying off staff again and moving some roles to 'hubs,' freeing up cash for AI investments

Restructure of finance teams will see some leave, and other roles created in Mexico City, Bangalore, and US cities

Google will pump more than $100B into AI, says DeepMind boss

Not all at once, of course

Google joins the custom server CPU crowd with Arm-based Axion chips

Neoverse V2 cores available in GCP later this year