Skip to main content

Google ready to return to China with a stripped-down Play Store

Google Play Store
Five years since Google pulled its services out of China, the company is ready to go back on different terms, according to a report in The Information. People “familiar” with Google’s plans have told The Information that this fall Google will seek Chinese government approval for a specially adapted version of the Play Store, one that would allow it to operate within the rules imposed by the authorities in the country.

Android Wear is also slated for an imminent return, the report says, which will re-establish Google as an Internet services provider within China itself (storing data locally and operating in line with government censorship). It was censorship legislation and allegations of Gmail snooping that prompted Google to pull out of the country in the first place.

Recommended Videos

With the Chinese and Asian mobile markets exploding, it seems Google is ready to make a return (a move we first got wind of in June) — perhaps the company feels it’s better to have those millions of users on its Google apps even if it has to jump through a few legal hoops to get them cleared for use. Android is the most popular mobile OS in China, but hardly any of the handsets have Google Play services and apps installed; meanwhile, companies such as Oppo, Xiaomi, and Huawei are going from strength to strength with their own forks of Android.

And let’s not forget Apple’s recent successes in the country either: Google isn’t going to want to fall too far behind its rival, and it’s much more important for users to be tied into apps like Gmail, Google Maps and Google Drive than it is for them to actually be using Android (although that helps too).

For now this is still speculation, but The Information has been right before — and it makes perfect sense for Google to want to make a return to China. With China and other Asian countries adding new mobile users at an exponential rate, the race is on between the mobile companies to grab as big a piece of the pie as possible. Google’s rumored tie-up with Huawei for the new Nexus 6 won’t hurt either.

David Nield
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
Apple and Google are teaming up to make tracking devices less creepy
Apple AirTag lifestyle image.

Apple and Google are partnering to develop a new standard for Bluetooth tracking devices that seeks to stop malicious stalking and other abusive use of gadgets like the Apple AirTag. Essentially, this would be a universal, OS-level tracker detection and alert system that will work uniformly across Android and iOS. The two companies are inviting stakeholders to review the proposal and submit their feedback within the next three months.

Once the feedback period is over, all the involved parties will work together to finalize the technical standardization, with the hope of releasing a market-ready version by the end of the year. Following the release and adoption by makers of tracking devices, the tech will be generally made available via a software update for Android and iOS devices.
Better late than never

Read more
I wish I never bought my Google Pixel 7 Pro
The Google Pixel 7 Pro standing up.

As someone who writes about smartphones, tablets, and other smart devices for a day job, it likely comes as no surprise to you that I'm the guy who friends and family come to for advice on which smartphone to buy. In recent years, my advice has more-or-less been the same: "Buy a Google Pixel." They're reliable, as close to an iPhone on Android as you're going to get, and have absolutely phenomenal cameras. They were a slam dunk of a recommendation, and I've been recommending Google's smartphone range to my nearest and dearest for years now.

That's why it's been tough for me to admit this -- but after almost six months with my new Pixel smartphone, I think I'm finally ready to face up to the truth. I wish I'd never bought my Google Pixel 7 Pro, as it's destroying my faith in Google.
I fell in love with an older Pixel

Read more
Your next Samsung phone might ditch Google Search for Bing
The screens on the Galaxy A54 and Galaxy S23 Ultra.

When you buy an Android phone, you expect Google Search to be installed out of the box as the default search engine. But that may not be the case when you buy your next Samsung phone. According to a report over the weekend, Samsung might abandon Google Search in favor of Bing as the default search engine for future Samsung Galaxy phones.

The possibility that Samsung is considering replacing Google Search with Bing on its smartphones sent Google into a "panic," according to the New York Times, Why? As the report explains, "An estimated $3 billion in annual revenue is at stake with the Samsung contract." If Samsung doesn't want to keep using Google for the default search engine on its phones, that's $3 billion per year Google will no longer get. And if Samsung decides it wants Bing instead of Google, who knows how many other companies will follow suit and do the same.
Why Samsung wants Bing over Google

Read more