Google Clamps Down On Spam, Intrusive Ads In Apps
An anonymous reader tips news that Google has sent out a letter to app developers explaining policy changes for any new apps published on the Google Play store. In-app purchases must now use Google Play's payment system unless it's for goods or services used outside the app itself. They've added language to dissuade developers from making their apps look like other apps, or like they come from other developers. But more significantly, Google has explained in detail what qualifies as spam: repetitive content, misleading product descriptions, gaming the rating system, affiliate traffic apps, or apps that send communications without user consent. Also, advertisements within apps must now follow the same rules as the app itself, and they can't be intrusive: Ads can't install things like shortcuts or icons without consent, they must notify the user of settings changes, they can't simulate notifications, and they can't request personal information to grant full app function.
...that Google advertising is all SPAM?
yes, yes it does
... but someone's raising a wall around their little garden.
#DeleteChrome
In-app purchases must now use Google Play's payment system unless it's for goods or services used outside the app itself.
Goddamn money-grubbing, parasitic Apple always trying to take a take a cut from other people's hard work. Oh wait, this is Google doing it? Oh, never mind then.
Now both Google and Apple need to add (and enforce membership of) a category for free apps that are just demos for their paid counterparts.
If the free version doesn't have enough functionality that a typical user would keep it around without buying addons or upgrading to the paid one, off to the "Demos" category it goes.
If they would make Angry Birds move that damned ad out of the way, I'd be able to stop disconnecting from the network before playing.
Oh Mighty GOOG, your lowly human followers beseech you to create an app store for windows much like your mighty holiness has created for your son, Android.
K thx bye (aka amen)
P.S. and osx and linux app stores too if its not too much trouble, your mighty holiness.
"Science flies us to the moon. Religion flies us into buildings." - Victor Stenger
I'm sure this will be welcomed by (most users and developers alike.
However, the more control they exercise, the more danger that they will abuse it (e.g. a carrier partner asks Google to get rid of an app that acts as an SMS gateway, so users don't need to pay for carriers' SMS package).
I believe that the key to keeping this sort of abuse under control (other then clear rules) is for Google to specify which rule was broken for every app that gets rejected.
CommonsGuy wrote a good post about this (no, I'm not him):
http://commonsware.com/blog/2012/02/23/think-about-principles.html
I noticed in Jelly Bean that a user can find out what app put spam in the notification bar. The user can then revoke the app's ability to ever put any more notifications into the notification bar.
Let's take that further. In Settings, Manage Applications, how about letting me manage the actual permissions that an app gets?
So even if a Flashlight app declares in the manifest both Internet Access and Abuse My Personal Contacts permissions, I can simply deny the app any subset of those permissions. This would go a very long way toward eliminating the worst abuses we are seeing. After all, why does a Flashlight app need the Abuse My Personal Contacts permission?
I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
just as Edwin responded I'm surprised that a person can profit $5197 in 1 month on the computer. have you read this page http://www.makecash16.com
Similar to Apple, Google should introduce a program for developers who wish to pay to have their app certified. The app would earn some kind of certification that Google has inspected the app, it meets various technical (not necessarily style) guidelines. Then the app is displayed in the store with a branded trademarked logo indicating it is certified.
Google could also have multiple levels of certification like Silver, Gold, Rhodium, etc.
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we will meet in Red 3 at the hour of scampering
I'll see your senator, and I'll raise you two judges.
and they can't request personal information to grant full app function.
Yeah! No muscling in on Google's turf!
This Space Intentionally Left Blank
Maybe Google should require malicious apps to set require an evil permission?
"Google clamps down on Spam, Intrusive Ads In Apps from competitors
Which is incredibly common. Not Google's fault directly, though I wish they'd keep the carriers from fucking with these kinds of things.
It's suited Google for some time to turn a blind eye to all the duplicate apps with misleading names and icons, and all the crap apps that do little or nothing. Why? Because they could pretend to have as many apps as the App Store, while at the same time bragging about how open and free they are compared to Apple. Unfortunately,the result has been to seriously damaged the user experience, especially back before the Play app redesign. They should have done this years ago.
Are you guys worried that Microsoft is going to try and market Windows 8 through the Google App Store?
Well, that sucks. I live in an area (China) where Google does not allow any payments AT ALL. That's right, I can't buy anything even if I want to. I even tried using a VPN to come from America - nope, Google looks at your SIM card. China Unicom, no dice. Pleco, an excellent Chinese dictionary application, cleverly got around this by offering a web page where you could buy a registration number outside the app. See, most of their customers are in China, obviously. Now that's in ruins. Good job, Google. Dicks.
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
The actual list of supported countries is slightly longer. Currently:
Argentina
Australia
Austria
Belgium
Brazil
Canada
Czech Republic
Denmark
Finland
France
Germany
Hong Kong
Ireland
Israel
Italy
Japan
Mexico
Netherlands
New Zealand
Norway
Poland
Portugal
Russia
Singapore
Spain
South Korea
Sweden
Switzerland
Taiwan
United Kingdom
United States
I am surprised the Android doesn't limit creation of shortcuts or icons external to the app, to an API? This API would automatically notify the user on trigger. If there is one, how are these apps successfully getting around it? Wouldn't this be something that Google could detect before listing an app?
Note, I am not an Android developer, so excuse any ignorance here.
Jumpstart the tartan drive.
There's a very very productive trend going on here.
No more packets to or from Google, Facebook, Twitter, CBS, Discus, etc
It's not a paranoid thing, it's a legal decision