Explore the controversy surrounding the Indian government's demand for smartphone source code access and its implications for ...
Elon Musk has announced that X will soon make its code open source to clarify how posts on the social media platform are ...
Is the Indian government forcing smartphone manufacturers to share their source code? PIB fact-checks a viral report ...
New government standards promise safer phones, but brands say deep software access, long data storage, and update approvals could make devices slower, costlier, and less secure for Indian users.
MAIT confirms no government demand for source code disclosure, citing amendments to security standards made last June.
The report said the government is proposing a set of 83 security standards under the Indian Telecom Security Assurance ...
PIB clarifies India has no plan to force smartphone makers to share source code; ongoing discussions focus only on improving ...
Google has delayed releasing the source code for Android 16 QPR1, worrying custom ROM developers who rely on timely AOSP (Android Open Source Project) updates. While Google typically publishes source ...
The Indian government dismissed a Reuters report claiming it was pushing for smartphone makers to share their source code.
Open source software has a number of benefits over commercial products, not least the fact that it can be downloaded for free. This means anyone can analyse the code and, assuming they have the right ...