Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Phones
  3. Android
  4. Business
  5. Mobile
  6. News

Report: AT&T wants to build its own smartphone using a forked version of Android

Add as a preferred source on Google

AT&T might be readying a phone that could represent a blow to Google’s ecosystem. The Information (subscription only) is reporting that the carrier is developing a new phone that would be powered by a forked version of Android, which means that it probably won’t include Google apps such as Gmail, Maps, YouTube, and others.

According to the report, AT&T is in talks with Cyanogen to develop the software. Although it would be based on Android, it would be a completely different version of it, similar to what Amazon does with the Fire OS. This means that it would have its own curated app store.

Recommended Videos

Cyanogen already develops an operating system based on Android for manufacturers in emerging markets, but it’s unclear if AT&T will use that software or a custom version of it.

According to sources, AT&T is also working with ZTE to build the device. ZTE, based in China, isn’t too well known here in the U.S., but the company makes a considerable quantity of Android phones. Interestingly enough, the U.S. imposed trade sanctions on the company earlier this month when it violated restrictions on exporting American goods to Iran and other specified nations. However, the U.S plans to lift those sanctions on a temporary basis.

Cyanogen already made it public that it’s going after Google. Last year, CEO Kirt McMaster said he wants to take Android away from Google and make it more open than ever. The company’s plan is to make it easy for manufacturers in emerging markets to produce a low cost smartphone without the need to develop software. A deal with AT&T would thus be huge for the company.

However, devices like the ones that use Cyanogen haven’t been successful here in the U.S. because Google apps and the Google Play Store aren’t made available on them. Just take a look at how badly the Amazon Fire Phone performed for further evidence.

So assuming the report is true, it’s unclear what AT&T might be thinking. It’s possible that it’s looking for a phone to package with DirecTV customers, or maybe it simply wants to take a run at Google, just like Cyanogen.

It’s unclear how far along AT&T might be in the process or how serious it is in releasing such a phone. For now, we would take this one with a huge dose of salt until either more evidence leaks or AT&T says something official.

Robert Nazarian
Robert Nazarian became a technology enthusiast when his parents bought him a Radio Shack TRS-80 Color. Now his biggest…
OnePlus is leaving the US and a global market exit could follow by 2027, says report
Financial strain and rising component costs are driving OnePlus out of the US and Europe.
OnePlus Nord 6 in hand

If you have been following OnePlus' exit rumors for a while, this news probably feels familiar. Reports about OnePlus scaling back in the US and Europe have surfaced multiple times over the past several months, only for the company to firmly deny them.

Now, Bloomberg reports OnePlus will actually begin ceasing operations in the US and Europe as soon as this week, and this time it looks real. The move is part of a larger restructuring at parent company Oppo, and OnePlus plans to eventually exit the rest of the world, including India, sometime in 2027, though it will remain active in China for now.

Read more
Xiaomi beats Samsung to become the first non-Pixel phone with stable Android 17
The stable Android 17 rollout begins with Xiaomi's latest flagship, putting it ahead of Samsung and other rivals.
Xiaomi 17 Ultra

Android 17 rolled out to Pixel phones last month, and if you were hoping your non-Pixel Android phone would catch up anytime soon, you might have to wait. Samsung is still running the One UI 9 in Public beta, and most other manufacturers haven't even announced when their skins will get the Android 17 treatment. 

So it's a genuine surprise that Xiaomi, of all companies, just jumped the queue. Xiaomi has started rolling out HyperOS 3 updates based on stable Android 17, and it's currently limited to the Xiaomi 17 series.

Read more
Your child can now get a free Spotify account with parental controls
Kids get personalized playlists and Wrapped summaries with Spotify's new free managed accounts.
spotify-kids-free-account

Parents no longer need to pay for a premium plan to give their kids a safe Spotify account. The company announced it is expanding free managed accounts to every subscription tier, starting immediately in the US, UK, Australia, France, Germany, and the Netherlands. Combined with earlier rollouts, managed accounts are now live in 16 countries total. Spotify says more countries are coming soon.

What can kids do with a managed account?

Read more