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Google is adopting a new framework to stop shady Android apps from raising hell

Android’s next security trick is a public record for official apps

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Android security is getting another layer of accountability, and it’s aimed squarely at a problem that digital signatures can’t solve. Google has announced that it is expanding Binary Transparency across the Android ecosystem. Starting with the production of Google apps for Android and Mainline modules, the company will log official releases on a public append-only ledger, which should make it easier to verify whether the software running on a device is the exact version Google intended to release.

Why digital signatures no longer cut it

Big step for Android security

Google has announced the expansion of Binary Transparency for Android apps, creating a public cryptographic ledger that lets anyone verify whether Google-signed apps are genuine. Ensures Android users can trust the software running on their devices. pic.twitter.com/Z6FiYsV4u4

— One UI by Samsung (@oneuibysamsung) May 5, 2026

For years, digital signatures have been the main way to confirm that an app is genuine. If an app carries the right signature, the system can trust that it came from the expected developer. But Google says that it has its limits. If a signing key is stolen, an insider pushes a modified build, or an internal development version leaks, the signature may still look valid. The bigger question becomes whether that specific app was ever meant to be released publicly.

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So this is basically where Binary Transparency comes in. Google calls digital signatures a “certificate of origin,” while Binary Transparency acts more like a “certificate of intent.” In simpler terms, a signed Google app is not enough. It also needs to appear in the public ledger to prove Google meant to ship it.

Android software gets a public record

Under the new system, Google’s production Android apps released after May 1, 2026, will have a matching cryptographic entry in the transparency log. This will include Google apps such as Play Services, along with Mainline modules that are updateable parts of Android running with elevated privileges. Meaning, if a Google-signed app released after that date is not on the ledger, the company did not intend to release it.

Why this matters for Android users

This won’t magically stop every malicious app or shady APK, and the benefits are mostly invisible for regular users. But for security researchers, device makers, and the wider Android ecosystem, it creates a way to verify official Google software instead of simply relying on trust.

Vikhyaat Vivek
Vikhyaat Vivek is a tech journalist and reviewer with seven years of experience covering consumer hardware, with a focus on…
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