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Your Android and iPhone updates could face new India security checks

The proposal would require phone makers to notify a government security body before major updates or patches, and companies argue that could slow fixes that need to ship fast.

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India phone security rules could end up adding a new checkpoint before security fixes hit your Android phone or iPhone. Reuters reported that draft standards would require phone makers to notify a government security body before releasing major software updates or security patches.

That sounds procedural, but timing is the product when a vulnerability is being exploited. If a fix has to clear an extra step, your device can stay exposed longer, even if a patch is ready.

A notice step before fixes

At the center of the debate is a requirement that vendors notify the National Centre for Communication Security before major releases and security fixes go out. The same framework also contemplates testing tied to those releases, which is where tech firms say things can get messy.

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Modern security response often happens in stages. A first patch closes the most urgent hole, then follow-up updates harden the system and clean up edge cases. Any process that encourages bundling changes or waiting for a larger release can slow that rhythm down.

Why vendors are nervous

The update requirement isn’t isolated. It sits inside a wider package that would push changes across the phone, including periodic malware scanning and a requirement to keep security audit logs on the device for 12 months.

Companies have warned that always-on scanning can cost battery life and performance, and that long log retention can be tough on storage, especially on lower-capacity phones. The same set of rules also includes protections meant to block installing older software builds and persistent warnings tied to rooted or jailbroken devices, with manufacturers arguing some requirements are hard to test consistently at scale.

There’s also a parallel fight over whether India wants access to phone source code. India’s IT ministry has rejected that claim while consultations continue on the broader security framework.

What to watch next

The standards were drafted in 2023 and are now being discussed again as India considers making them legally enforceable. The key detail for consumers is whether “notify” stays a lightweight heads-up or becomes a step that can hold up urgent fixes.

Until the shape of the rule is clearer, the best move is still simple. Keep automatic updates on, and install security fixes quickly when they arrive.

Paulo Vargas
Paulo Vargas is an English major turned reporter turned technical writer, with a career that has always circled back to…
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