Google's biggest Android problem remains a huge issue but Semi-dokyumento: Tokkun Meiki Dukuriit's slowly improving.
At least that's the takeaway from Google's Android Security Year in Review, the latest update on the company's ongoing plan to get phone makers to adopt security updates more quickly.
SEE ALSO: It's time to start thinking about what Google will name Android OWhile Android fans often cite the amount of choice in Android devices as one of the main draws of the platform, the fact remains that this continues to be its biggest weakness as well. That's because so many device makers are extraordinarily slow to adopt software updates and critical security patches.
Google has been trying to address this for years -- the company may have even once considered a plan to publicly "shame" carriers and manufacturers who were too slow with updates -- and has taken steps to address this within Android itself.
So has all this been working? Sort of. Adrian Ludwig, from Google's Android security team, told TechCrunchthat as of the end of 2016, more than 78 percent of flagship devices in North America were up to date with security patches. That's pretty good but when you look beyond flagships in North America, that progress disappears.
"about half" of all Android devices didn't get a single security update in the last year
"About half of devices in use at the end of 2016 had not received a platform security update in the previous year" Ludwig writes in a blog post.
That's right, "about half" of all Android devices didn't get a single security update in the last year. Pretty alarming, right?
Yes, but Ludwig says Google is working on new fixes that will make it easier and faster for its partners to issue updates. "We're working to increase device security updates by streamlining our security update program to make it easier for manufacturers to deploy security patches and releasing A/B updates to make it easier for users to apply those patches," he writes.
Whether that will be enough is hard to say. A more streamlined process will likely help incentivize larger companies to update faster but smaller OEMs, and those that make low-end devices, will likely continue to lag without more aggressive measures from Google.
And even if manufacturers streamline updates, users still rely on carriers to push out updates in a timely manner so it's hard to see the landscape changing drastically in the foreseeable future, absent a major shift in how security patches are handled.
As always, the most reliable way to keep your Android up to date is to use a Nexus or Pixel phone, since Google oversees the updates itself.
Topics Android Cybersecurity Google
Zeus, and Other News by Sadie SteinNew Bram Stoker, and Other News by Sadie SteinThe Joys of Reading by Sadie SteinHappy 2013, From Mark Twain by Sadie SteinBook Shopping with the BestHow to be a Bureaucrat, and Other News by Sadie SteinEducational Viewing by Sadie SteinThe Perfect Stocking Stuffer by Sadie SteinHoliday … Cheer? by Sadie SteinHappy New Year! And Other News by Sadie SteinConspiracy Theories, and Other News by Sadie SteinA Stowaway to the Thanatosphere: My Voyage Beyond Apollo with Norman Mailer by Rex WeinerJolly Writers, and Other News by Sadie SteinFyodor Khitruk, 1917–2012 by Sadie SteinWPA Wants You to Read by Sadie SteinFast, Cheap, and Out of Control: Modernists Go OffBookless Libraries, and Other News by Sadie SteinReading the Viaduct by Jessica Vivian Chiu“Hooray for Santy Claus!” by Sadie SteinWhat We’re Loving: Saintly Comics, High Relief by Sadie Stein Samsung's 50 TNT's 'Snowpiercer' takes too long to pick up speed: Review The art of transforming 'Minecraft' into 'Minecraft Dungeons' Artist leaves 15,000 coins along a canal and live tweets what happens Scammers send fake COVID Twitter tests feature that limits who can respond to tweets One social network ranked worst for young people's mental health and wellbeing Apple released iOS 13.5, and here's why you should update Sphero goes from Star Wars toymaker to making robots for the military No ghosts allowed: An elite dating app makes you mind your manners Leaked Microsoft Surface Duo specs, if true, aren't all that exciting Tips for dealing with Donald Trump that also work with a toddler Instagram and Snapchat don't pay. Patreon does and it's growing like crazy. Man gets revenge on rude people in coffee shop with a hilarious power move Turns out 'Red Dead Redemption 2' is a perfect platform for work meetings Zuckerberg says Facebook is ready to profit from shift to remote work Apple’s lack of daycare isn’t an oversight, it’s a feature Google's Search app adds dark mode setting for Android and iOS How to use Nextdoor, Facebook, Slack to help neighbors amid coronavirus 'Normal People' producer calls out Pornhub for pirated sex scenes
0.8119s , 8231.5234375 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Semi-dokyumento: Tokkun Meiki Dukuri】,Miracle Information Network