When it comes to the Android threat landscape, we’re into the science of big numbers. Google describes “a vibrant ecosystem with billions of users around the globe and millions of helpful apps,” and so it’s little surprise that the number of threats it intercepts and removes are just as large and impressive.
Android maker Google just shared that it blocked over 2.3 million Android app submissions at the Play Store last year. The reason was cited as being a violation of a host of its policies which made it very risky for people to use.
Chinese AI lab DeepSeek's Android app has taken the No. 1 spot on the Google Play Store, days after the chatbot app clinched the top spot on the App Store.
Here’s what you need to know about DeepSeek, the Chinese AI startup that rattled markets as its app dethroned OpenAI's as the most-downloaded free app in the U.S. on Apple.
How does Google protect your Android phone from dangerous apps? What safeguards are in place to prevent such threats? We break it all down here.
The Viwoods AI Note and AI Mini have a secret weapon compared to the competition: Google Play. A couple of months ago, the Google Play Store was just added to the AIPaper in the v3.1.7 release, and the Mini received it,
Sam Bright, the lead at Google Play, said the "ultimate goal" is to have Android games and apps work seamlessly across mobile, XR, and TV.
Google has broken down how it protected Android users in 2024 by blocking apps, banning developers and adding enhanced security.
President Donald Trump is meeting Friday with Nvidia CEO Jensen Huang, whose company designs and supplies the advanced computer chips that play an integral role in developing artificial intelligence.
In his new book, LinkedIn's Reid Hoffman argues that fear-focused responses to AI ignore the incredible promise this technological revolution holds.
The Chinese firm has pulled back the curtain to expose how the top labs may be building their next-generation models. Now things get interesting.