Google’s new Play Store rules target annoying ads and copycat crypto apps – The Verge

Posted: August 2, 2022 at 3:37 pm

Google is trying to cut down on annoying, unskippable ads in Android apps and overall bad behavior in the Play Store (via TechCrunch). The company announced wide-ranging policy changes on Wednesday that update rules across several categories to be more specific, clamping down on loopholes developers may have used to skirt existing rules.

One of the changes that will impact your everyday phone usage the most is for ads. Google says its updated guidelines, which will go into effect on September 30th, help ensure high quality experiences for users when they are using Google Play apps. The new policy tells developers that apps cant pop up a full-screen ad that wont let you close it after 15 seconds. There are some exceptions if you voluntarily choose to watch an ad to get some sort of reward points, or if they pop up during a break in the action, those rules wont necessarily apply.

Googles current policy says ads must be easily dismissible without penalty and that you have to be able to close out of full-screen ads, but the 15-second benchmark is new. While thats still a bit of a wait, it does make it so that you wont have to sit through a two-minute long ad where the (tiny, hard to see) x only appears after 70 seconds, right in the middle of a game or while trying to do something else.

The new rules also specify that ads shouldnt be unexpected, popping up right after you load a level or article. Again, the current rules already say that surprise disruptive ads arent allowed, but the new rules give additional concrete examples of violations.

Its worth noting that the ad policies for apps made for children are stricter. While Googles not changing a ton about what types of ads developers can show to kids, it will be making some changes to the tools that developers use to deliver those ads, starting in November.

Googles also making changes to how apps can implement and use Androids built-in VPN (or virtual private network) tools. Apps wont be allowed to implement their own VPNs to collect user data unless they get explicit permission from the user, nor will they be able to use VPNs to help users bypass or change ads from other apps. Mishaal Rahman, a technical editor for Esper, pointed out on Twitter that this could help clamp down on ad fraud where users pretend to be clicking on ads from one country while actually being in another but says that it could also affect things like DuckDuckGos privacy-focused app tracking protection.

Googles new rules include several other changes as well. For example, developers will be required to link to an easy-to-use, online method for canceling subscriptions in their app if their app sells subscriptions the company does say that linking to Google Plays subscription center counts. Googles also cracking down on health misinformation, adding a section that says apps cant contain misleading information about vaccines, unapproved treatments, or other harmful health practices, such as conversion therapy.

The update also makes some changes to the language around monitoring apps, or stalkerware, saying that any app made to track people has to use a specific flag telling Google what its doing and that apps have to say that they can monitor or track you in their Play Store description. (These sorts of apps are still only allowed to track employees and children Google explicitly says using these apps for tracking someone else, like a spouse, is banned, even if the user claims the person being tracked is aware of it.)

Theres one slightly humorous tidbit in the updated Impersonation section in addition to other companies, developers, and organizations, Googles new rules say that developers cant try and trick people into thinking that their app is associated with an entity if its not. As an example of what this means, Google shows an app with iconography that could trick users into thinking its associated with a government or cryptocurrency project. (Theres also a funny line about how you cant name your app Justin Bieber Official unless youre actually Justin Bieber or have his permission, but it was already in the existing guidelines.)

This example appears to be perfect timing on Googles part. While the policy wont go into effect until the end of August, the company announced it just a day before Sen. Sherrod Brown (D-OH) sent it a letter asking for more information on scammy crypto apps on the Play Store.

See more here:

Google's new Play Store rules target annoying ads and copycat crypto apps - The Verge

Related Posts