Skip to main content

Google is getting ready to remove lots of Android apps from the Play Store

Samsung Galaxy S23 showing Google Play Store
Christine Romero-Chan / Digital Trends

Starting next month, Google will require apps on the Play Store to provide a “stable, engaging, responsive user experience.” If they don’t, the company plans to eventually remove those apps from the store.

This policy is part of Google’s latest spam policy update and is designed to eliminate apps with “limited functionality and content,” such as text-only apps and single wallpaper apps. The new rules take effect on Saturday, August 31.

Recommended Videos

According to the company, apps targeted for deletion fall into three broad categories:

  • Apps that are static without app-specific functionalities; for example, text-only or PDF file apps
  • Apps with very little content and that do not provide an engaging user experience; for example, single wallpaper apps
  • Apps that are designed to do nothing or have no function

Google is also better targeting apps with broken functionality. These include apps that install properly, but don’t load or aren’t responsive.

The company’s recent actions are part of its ongoing efforts to remove and restrict certain apps from Google Play. According to Android Authority, in 2023, the company prevented 2.28 million policy-violating apps from being published and rejected nearly 200,000 apps to enhance user protection.

Millions of Android-based devices are in the wild, and it’s nice to see Google running after useless or dangerous apps. Whether on a top-of-the-line Samsung Galaxy S24 Ultra or a budget phone, inferior apps have no business on smart devices.

Google concludes that “apps should provide a stable, responsive, and engaging user experience. Apps that crash, do not have the basic degree of adequate utility as mobile apps, lack engaging content, or exhibit other behavior that is not consistent with a functional and engaging user experience are not allowed on Google Play.”

Bryan M. Wolfe
Bryan M. Wolfe has over a decade of experience as a technology writer. He writes about mobile.
This Google app will make your Pixel look more like an iPhone
A person holding the Google Pixel 9.

As Google's Pixel line of phones has grown over the years, some fans have pointed out the increasing resemblance to the iPhone. The rounded edges, sleek design, and raised camera bump are all reminiscent of Apple's iconic device — especially with the newest Google Pixel 9.

Now, it looks like even the incoming call screen of the Google Phone app will be taking on an iPhone-like appearance. This is according to an APK breakdown by Android Authority.

Read more
Your Gmail app will soon help protect you from scams
Moto G 5G (2024) in Sage Green showing Gmail.

Email scams are nothing new. The old Nigerian prince con has been around long enough that it's become a meme, but more modern scams can be a lot harder to pick out. According to statistics, nearly 3.4 billion phishing emails are sent per day. Gmail will soon implement a feature on its mobile platform that puts a checkmark beside verified senders to help users tell what's legit — and what possibly isn't — at a glance.

The feature already exists on the Gmail desktop website, but with over half of all users accessing their Gmail accounts from a mobile app, it's a welcome addition. It utilizes a standard called Brand Indicators for Message Identification (BIMI) and a Verified Mark Certificate (VMC). If an email contains these marks, it's highly unlikely they come from a malicious source.

Read more
MKBHD released a wallpaper app, and it’s getting destroyed
A screenshot of the Panels app.

Marques Brownlee, better known as MKBHD, is a popular tech YouTuber who focuses heavily on mobile content. He just released a new wallpaper app called Panels for iOS and Android that features real artists, not AI. But there's a problem: the app is getting demolished on social media.

Brownlee first announced the app on X. At the time of writing, the post (a tweet? Xeet? Who knows anymore?) has 1.6K comments, over 1.7K reposts, and over 13K likes. Despite this, the sentiment in the comment section is far from positive.

Read more