Google Imposes 24-Hour Delay on Unverified Android App Installs as It Tightens Anti-Scam Rules
Updated
Updated · How-To Geek · May 31
Google Imposes 24-Hour Delay on Unverified Android App Installs as It Tightens Anti-Scam Rules
1 articles · Updated · How-To Geek · May 31
Android users will soon face at least a 24-hour wait before installing apps from developers who have not verified themselves with Google.
Google says the delay is meant to blunt phone-based ransomware and scam campaigns that pressure victims into sideloading malicious apps and granting device access.
The change will also hit open-source apps and alternative app stores, because developers who avoid giving Google personal ID, address or contact details are swept into the restriction.
Critics argue the move targets outside app sources while leaving broader risks inside Google Play, where apps can still track users, harvest data and push manipulative in-app purchases.
The shift underscores Google's wider control over Android distribution, even as privacy-focused alternatives such as F-Droid and /e/OS highlight tracking and other app 'anti-features' more explicitly.
Is Google's 24-hour app delay a real defense against scams or a move to control its competition?
As Android's openness shrinks for safety, are users actually safer or just losing control over their devices?