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

Google warns users not to transfer Google apps on Huawei phones

Add as a preferred source on Google
 

Google apps and services won’t be coming back to Huawei devices any time soon — and based on a new post published by Google on its Android support forums, it may be difficult to side-load or transfer Google apps onto Huawei devices, too.

Recommended Videos

The new post details how, because of government restrictions, Google has been prohibited from working with Huawei on new phones — and as such, you shouldn’t expect to see apps like Gmail, YouTube, or the Google Play Store on Huawei phones any time soon.

When it comes to the issue of side-loading, while some users may find a way to transfer apps onto Huawei phones, Google recommends they don’t. Why? Well, according to Google, there’s a “high risk of installing an app that has been altered or tampered with in ways that can compromise user security.”

Before Google allows apps and services to be installed on a phone, the phone has to be “certified,” which includes a rigorous security review. Huawei phones have not had to go through this security review, and as such Google can’t guarantee the security of user data on those devices.

“Because of the government restrictions described above, new Huawei device models made available to the public after May 16, 2019, have not been able to go through this security process nor will they have Play Protect preloaded,” Google said in a blog post. “As a result, they are considered ‘uncertified,’ and will not be able to utilize Google’s apps and services.”

There has been some leeway in government restrictions. Notably, the U.S. government granted a temporary general license that allowed Google to work with Huawei on some security updates for existing phones.

Generally speaking, there seems to be no end in sight for the government restrictions on Google’s work with Huawei — and Huawei is even developing its own operating system that could replace Android on its phones. The operating system is currently called Hongmeng, but it may end up being called Ark OS, according to some reports.

Huawei has also been restricted from supplying 5G equipment to U.S. telecommunications companies, however, the U.K. recently announced that it would allow companies to work with Huawei.

Christian de Looper
Christian de Looper is a long-time freelance writer who has covered every facet of the consumer tech and electric vehicle…
AI vision is getting too hungry, and this method puts it on a diet
KAIST researchers say Upsample Anything sharpens compressed visual data while cutting GPU memory demands by up to 16 times.
Car, Transportation, Vehicle

KAIST researchers have developed an AI vision method built for a problem phone makers can’t ignore forever. Upsample Anything rebuilds high-resolution visual features from compressed image data, aiming to make on-device AI sharper without demanding a much bigger memory budget.

Phones already lean on compression to keep camera-based intelligence moving quickly. The tradeoff is that small objects, thin edges, and subtle defects can get stripped away before a vision system has enough detail to work with.

Read more
Google Photos’ AI image editor expands to more regions, but only for Android users
Edit with Ask Photos, which lets you make edits by describing what you want, is now available for Android users in Germany, the UK, France, Spain, and Italy.
Featured image for Google Photos conversational edit ability.

Google introduced an AI-powered editing feature in Google Photos called "Edit with Ask Photos" last year, allowing users to make photo adjustments using natural language prompts. It initially debuted in a handful of countries, but Google is now expanding support to five new markets.

From four countries to nine

Read more
Google is giving Pixel Screenshots a cloud AI boost while keeping your data private
The update gives Pixel Screenshots more AI horsepower for searching your saved screenshots, without sending your data through standard cloud servers.
Pixel Screenshots app on a PIxel being held by someone.

Google's Pixel Screenshots app is gaining cloud-based AI processing with its latest update, expanding beyond the on-device-only approach it has used since launch.

On-device AI gets a cloud companion

Read more