Oman Daily Observer

Huawei new phones lose access to install Google’s apps

-

WASHINGTON: Huawei Technologi­es Co Ltd’s newly launched Mate 30 devices have lost their access to manually install Google’s Android apps, Bloomberg reported on Tuesday.

According to the report, security researcher John Wu published a blog post that explained how users of Huawei’s Mate 30 Pro were able to manually download and install Google apps, despite a US blacklisti­ng that prohibits the Chinese company from using American components and software.

But in the wake of the revelation­s, the Mate 30 devices, made to work on new 5G mobile networks, lost their clearance to manually install Android apps, as reported by a number of smartphone experts, Bloomberg said.

The Mate 30 is Huawei’s first major flagship smartphone launched last month, since US President Donald Trump’s administra­tion effectivel­y blackliste­d the company in mid-may, alleging it is involved in activities that compromise US national security, a charge the company denies.

Wu wrote in the post a widespread method to install Google Services on newly released Huawei devices relies on undocument­ed Huawei specific mobile device management applicatio­n programmin­g interface, or MDM APIS.

“Although this “backdoor” requires user interactio­n to be enabled, the installer app, which is signed with a special certificat­e from Huawei, was granted privileges nowhere to be found on standard Android systems,” he wrote.

“The system framework in Huawei’s operating system has a “backdoor” that allows permitted apps to flag some user apps as system apps despite the fact that it does not actually exist on any read-only partitions,” Wu said.

This process let the Mate 30 phones to run popular apps like Google Maps and Gmail that otherwise would not be permitted, Bloomberg reported.

An easy-to-use app enabling the installati­on of Google apps and services on the Mate 30 Pro, called Lzplay, had emerged alongside the device’s release, however it has disappeare­d after Wu’s posting. Only Google is able to make that change through its Safetynet anti-abuse check, the report said.

The Mate 30 devices, made to work on new 5G mobile networks, lost their clearance to manually install Android apps

 ?? Reuters ?? A man points a finger to the Google Play app logo on his Huawei smartphone in this illustrati­on picture. —
Reuters A man points a finger to the Google Play app logo on his Huawei smartphone in this illustrati­on picture. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman