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Google just demolished Tim Cook's case against Android

Apr 7, 2015, 16:08 IST

AppleTim Cook called Android a "toxic hellstew of vulnerabilities."

Last year, at Apple's WWDC developers' conference, Apple CEO Tim Cook ripped Android to shreds with two slides about the level of malware on Google's mobile operating system. He showed a pie chart indicating that 99% of mobile malware was on Android, and described Android as a "toxic hellstew of vulnerabilities."

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It got a big laugh.

More importantly, it cemented the idea that iPhone is the safe place for users, and iOS is the system that always just works and never gets viruses.

Last week, Google published its comeback. The company's "Android Security 2014 Year in Review" report shows that less than 1% of Android devices have any malware. Google scans Active Android devices with a product called "Verify Apps," which seeks out viruses, ransomware or other "potentially harmful applications" (PHAs).

What's interesting about the report is that less than 1% of all Android devices have malware - even the ones in China that download apps from sketchy off-brand app stores outside Google Play.

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Inside Google Play, "fewer than 0.15% of devices that download only from Google Play had a PHA installed."

Here is what that looks like in a chart:

Here is a similar set of data comparing infection levels for phones inside Google Play and phones that are downloading stuff from outside Google Play:

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Note that the green line, which represents the vast bulk of Android users who only get apps from Google Play, is basically at zero.

Bottom line: If you're on Android, stop worrying about malware. You will have to try really hard to get harmful apps onto your phone. The only way an Android phone is realistically going to get infected is if you are downloading stuff from non-Google Play web sites. And as Google Play has the largest selection of apps on the planet - larger than Apple's App Store - this should not be something you'd need to do anyway.

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