Google Boosts Encryption For Low-End Android Devices
Google's Adiantum boosts encryption for low-end devices by processors that do not have hardware backing for AES. Google introduced a new storage encryption solution that it hopes going to expand safety efforts across its full spectrum of Android-powered devices – including low-end devices that typically can't backing encryption. It can slow down low-end or older devices, such as Android Go phones or smartwatches, by taking a toll on system resources. Most new Android devices have hardware backing for AES integrated into their processors (ARM's laanalisis ARMv8 processor). In fact, Google claims that Adiantum encryption and decryption on these low-end devices running on the Cortex A7 is about 5 times faster than the same devices by support for AES (AES-256-XTS).Google to kill dedicated back button in Android Q, make it look like iOS
referring to Upping The Browser Game 18 Jul, 2018 By Karan BajajStill stuck by the browser that came by your Android smartphone? You can do this from within any other running app (you need to determine Flynx as the default browser for this function). You can choose to merge tabs and apps in the recent app monitor for ease of access. Lynket works by your existing browser extremely you need to choose if it uses Chrome, Firefox, Brave or Samsung's browser to render pages. You can choose to merge tabs and apps in the recent app monitor for ease of access.Google May Face Another Android Antitrust Fine in India
Reports indicate that India's antitrust regulators are beginning an investigation of Google, and Android is once again the aim of the probe. Sources claim that India's Competition Commission of India (CCI) started investigating Google's Android licensing practices about 6 months ago. Google executives have announcly met by Indian regulators to discuss the issue, that stems from complaints made by individuals. In the EU, Google caught heat for the restrictions placed on device makers which licensed its Android apps. If a company wanted to license the Play Store, it needed to pre-load Google search, Chrome, and other apps.Exclusive: Google is working on a Face ID-like feature for Android Q
Exclusive: Google is working on a Face ID-like feature for Android QWhile Android smartphones supported fingerprint scanners long before the Apple iPhone did, Android devices are playing catch up the time it comes to safe biometric facial authentication hardware. Furthermore, the existing "face unlock" feature that has existed on Android devices for many years now, the "Trusted Face" feature, is part of Google Play Services, is old, and is insecure, extremely we're confident that this is a new feature in Android Q. The only thing these strings prove is that AOSP is now backing facial recognition hardware for face unlock, payments, and app authentication. The fact that Google is backing facial recognition hardware in Android Q naturally means they have a device they're Analyzing it on. This article was updated on February 8th, 2019, by screenbullets of the set-up flow for safe facial recognition in Android Pie.collected by :Maya Tony
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