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mardi 19 juin 2018

Google Play Store will authenticate peer-to-peer app downloads and add to your Library

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Piracy is one of the biggest problems for Android. The main reason for the problem is our favorite operating system's open nature. You can do virtually anything on your Android device, and that includes downloading applications illegally from outside the Google Play Store. While Android applications are pretty cheap compared to the competition, people still tend to do it.

As it turns out, Google's been thinking about what they can do with this problem, and now they've finally found a solution. Last year, Google announced a slew of updates to app security.  Today, they have expanded on that by adding small security metadata on top of developer's uploaded APKs in the Play Store. This will make sure that the application is distributed from Play Store.

As Google explains, they took the measure to make sure that developers reach a wider audience. They said that peer-to-peer application sharing is popular in countries where mobile data plans are expensive and not available for all. The following change will give people more confidence that an application is definitely from Play Store. In fact, apps downloaded from peer-to-peer sharing will be added to your Play Store library (assuming they are legit).

Another noteworthy change is that app authentication can now happen in offline mode. This means that you won't need any kind of internet connection for making sure of applications authenticity. Developers don't really need to do anything other than uploading an APK file, and that's nothing new for them. New metadata is now built into APP Signing Block. Google Play's maximum APK size will also be increased to take the added metadata into account.


Source: Android Developers Blog



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