Google Cracking Down on Battery-Draining Apps
Nov 12, 2025, 12:45 PM by Rich Brome @rbrome.bsky.social

Google is enhancing Android and its Play app store with a new power-efficiency metric for apps. If and when an app consistently crosses a threshold for "excessive" power usage, the app's public store page may show a warning about battery usage, and Google may limit how often the app is suggested. The new policy is slated to go into effect starting March 2026. More specifically, the metric measures "partial wake locks", which let apps keep the phone "awake" to perform background tasks even while the screen is off and the phone appears idle. Google's threshold for "excessive" is 2 cumulative hours in a 24 hour period. There are exceptions for certain activities such as audio playback and user-initiated data transfers. App developers can view this and other key metrics for their app(s) in Google's "Android vitals" dashboard.
Comments
No messages yet

iPhone 15 Series Goes All-In on USB-C and Dynamic Island
Samsung S24 Series Adds More AI, Updates the Hardware
Motorola Gets Serious About Foldables with New RAZR Lineup
iOS 17 Brings Comprehensive Protection Against Unwanted Nude Images
Snapdragon 8 Gen 3 Can Run Generative AI Voice Assistant On-Device



