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posted by martyb on Monday August 31 2015, @07:41AM   Printer-friendly
from the it's-about-time dept.

A pretty nice addition to [the third developer preview of the OS formerly known as Android M] is granular control over the permissions [which] each and every app requires upon installing it, giving Android users "meaningful choice of control". Just like in iOS, apps in Android 6.0 Marshmallow will only [allow] you to grant them a certain permission immediately before the app needs it and not in bulk during the installation, [as was the case] in previous Android installments.

[...] Android 6.0 Marshmallow officially introduces API Level 23, which is one of the requirements to have app permissions that can be granted on demand. All Android apps need to be updated [by their developers] so that they support the brand new API0 Level 23 libraries in order to introduce the individual granular app permissions.

SiliconANGLE notes that 6.0 is also getting native fingerprint support, a new power-saving mode, and Android Pay.
They also note

Hardly anyone with an existing Android phone will ever get to use [6.0].

[...] Android-powered devices rely on the manufacturer to update the operating system and the reality is that it rarely happens.

To put it more crudely, the Android update process is f**ked.

[...] [As Android remains open source and free to use,] Google can't force manufacturers to come to the party in terms of upgrades [any] more than it can force manufacturers to stop skinning their Android installs with their own custom user interfaces and software.

Release of Android 6.0 is expected in 2015Q4.


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  • (Score: 2) by quacking duck on Monday August 31 2015, @02:38PM

    by quacking duck (1395) on Monday August 31 2015, @02:38PM (#230178)

    All the somewhat-credible but often-overblown criticism about iOS copying Android features, and yet Android took how many years to finally copy the far-more crucial granular app permissions model that iOS and Blackberry before it had? After how many additional *millions* of devices were released that can't or won't ever be updated to use this feature?

    iOS started off simple, with only location services able to be restricted on a per-app basis... in *2008*. But if this post [androidcentral.com] is to be believed, Android is only finally getting to this fundamental privacy option 7 years later.

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