Google has taken the extraordinary step to block reviewers from being able to download popular chip testing benchmarks directly through its Play Store, surprising reviewers of its latest Pixel 8 series smartphones. Incredibly, the company has extended this block to include all new customers of its P...
Google has lifted the block it placed on the ability for users to freely install benchmarking apps on its Pixel 8 and Pixel 8 Pro smartphones. The block had been in place during the review embargo period but extended past the on sale period where customers purchasing the devices couldn’t install benchmarks on their new Pixels either.
That is insane. Straight up blacklisting popular software because they don't want people to look too closely at what they purchased. It's amazing what the public is willing to accept, just such a constant stream of reports about bad behavior from companies that most people can't find the energy to care.
The app hasn't been updated but the Play Store block has indeed been lifted. People were sideloading without issue. Perhaps Google intended for the block to only last until launch to prevent reviewers only.
Ah, so I fell for reactionary bs assuming that a fairly well written article had good information? Dammit. =P Thanks for the info, that sounds a lot more plausible to me.
This whole thing isn't on Google. The app developers didn't update their target API so they were not available. My Pixel 7 is on Android 14 as well and they weren't available either until it just got fixed.
This article seems to be outdated as both apps are now visible in the Play Store and I had no problems downloading and running them. A comment suggests that it may be due to the previous minimum SDK target for the apps being too low. I'd be willing to chalk this up to being more innocuous than active malice on Google's part.
When this first came out I checked on my Pixel 7 which is on A14 already and I didn't have the apps available either.
They are now available.
So yeah, it's almost certainly on the app developers who didn't target the new API version available, not Google. New Pixels launch with new versions of Android, but you can validate the same issue on older Pixels who have already upgraded to the new Android version.
Isn't this because the minimum SDK level increase requirement in the play store and android 14? This gets rid of older Lapis that are less efficient or secure from modern apps. The benchmarking tools haven't targeted newer APIs and are thus the ones at fault. Devs need to keep their stuff updated; that's half the point of the beta period every year for the major version releases.
Sounds a bit like a false narrative to be honest. Given how trivial it is to sideload, it doesn't make sense for Google to have thought disallowing installation from the Play Store would stop anyone from benchmarking. It seems implausible to me.
People in the business of reviewing Android phones couldn't possibly know about sideloading. I'm shocked anyone at Google thought this would do anything but make them look bad.
It would probably violate agreements and they'd blacklist the reviewers for future releases. It would also make those reviewers look bad if they don't respect review agreements and embargos. Other companies might not trust them with preview units.
I agree Google looks absurd here. But if my living was being made reviewing things, I wouldn't want to risk companies not giving me the early look that reviewers get. Especially when I can just wait till the device comes out and benchmark it then, since there's no longer an embargo or agreement once a device goes public
A reviewer who's being ethical would note any such demands from a manufacturer in their review, or refuse to review a product if the demands were too extreme. Banning benchmarks from reviews is pretty questionable, though not unprecedented. I should note that I am a reviewer, though not of phones and I don't make my living from it. I have encountered and rejected the occasional unethical request (usually manufacturers wanting to screen the review's content before publication).
Trying to keep people from benchmarking it via the Play Store is the absurd part. They can use a contract for reviewers, but that's not even going to slow down sophisticated end users.