Skip to main content

Google tightens up app store guidelines to protect users

google tightens app store guidelines protect users android bot
Image used with permission by copyright holder

Google has updated its Google Play Developer Program Policy in an attempt to cut down on deceptive advertising practices and other nefarious activities on the part of app developers and the third-party services they utilize. The policy changes put the onus on app coders to make sure the tools they submit to Google’s store are free from shady advertising or affiliate schemes.

Apps published on Google Play may not use “promotion via deceptive ads on websites, apps or other properties” read the new guidelines. Particular emphasis is placed on pop-up adverts that try and simulate ‘official’ Android or app notifications. The new policy also clamps down on “tactics which cause redirection to Google Play or the download of the app without informed user action” and unsolicited use of SMS for advertising purposes.

Recommended Videos

The Developer Program Policy specifies that “ads must not simulate or impersonate the user interface of any app, or notification and warning elements of an operating system” — in other words, if it’s an advert, then it has to look like an advert. Google has also reworded its guidelines on apps that include sexual content: “Apps that contain or promote pornography are prohibited; this includes sexually explicit or erotic content, icons, titles or descriptions,” explains the official documentation.

Other changes, as reported by TechCrunch, include bans for any app that links to a piece of malware or that tries to modify the settings of a browser app. Developers have a couple of weeks to make sure that their apps comply with the new guidelines and resubmit them to Google Play.

David Nield
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Dave is a freelance journalist from Manchester in the north-west of England. He's been writing about technology since the…
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
Google’s Find My Device app is copying a helpful iPhone feature
Someone using Find My with an iPhone 15.

Google's Find My Device network is still a work in progress, with features being added slowly. According to 9to5Google, an important feature that could arrive soon has proven crucial to its chief competitor, Apple, with the Find My app on the iPhone.

In the latest version of the Find My Device app for Android, v3.1.148, Google has set what’s being called a “foundation” for a compass feature -- just like Apple's Precision Finding tool.

Read more
Passports are coming to Google Wallet, but you’ll still need the paper version
Person holding a phone with Google Wallet opened showing the new Everything Else feature.

Do you use Google Wallet? It's handy for storing payment methods, event tickets, and much more in an easily accessible place, but now there's a new feature coming: passports.

Last year, Google introduced the ability to save select state identification cards to your Wallet. The company now says it's soon going to beta test a new type of digital ID that not only makes this feature available to a larger number of users, but also includes a U.S. passport. And yes, it will work at the airport at select Transportation Security Administration (TSA) checkpoints.

Read more