Google to ban apps from recording phone calls

Andrew Griffin
Friday 22 April 2022 12:14 EDT
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Un logotipo de Google y una estatua de Android se ven en Googleplex en Menlo Park, California.
Un logotipo de Google y una estatua de Android se ven en Googleplex en Menlo Park, California. (AFP via Getty Images)

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Google is to completely ban apps from recording phone calls next month.

The company will be removing the functionality that are used by call recording apps to give them access to the calls themselves.

That access is achieved through accessibility technology that is intended to make the phone able to adapt to those users with different needs. But it can also be used to access the sound from phone calls and store them.

Google’s documentation makes clear that it is not intended for recording phone calls and that new changes will stop apps from being able to do so.

Those changes go into effect on 11 May and mean that no apps will be able to record calls. It is not clear whether developers will comply with the ruling or if Google will be forced to remove apps that do not comply from the online store.

But it is specifically limited to the Google Play Store, meaning that phones that come with call-recording apps that are built in will still be able to do so. Those system apps do not need permission to access phone calls since they are built into the phone.

Google has been progressively making it more difficult to record phone calls on Android, by removing the ways they can access the audio from the phone. It does so in the name of privacy and security, and to ensure that users do not break laws against call recording that exist in some states and countries.

The decision also brings it in line with the iPhone, which already makes it impossible for apps to record phone calls and offers no built-in apps with that functionality.

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