https://threatpost.com/android-mobile-security-tls-encryption/150760/


More than 90 percent of Android apps running on the latest OS encrypt their 
traffic by default.

A full 80 percent of Android apps are encrypting their traffic by default, 
according to a Transport Layer Security (TLS) adoption update from Google.

That percentage is even greater for apps targeting Android 9 and higher, with 
90 percent of those encrypting traffic by default, the tech giant said on 
Tuesday.

TLS is a cryptographic protocol standard ratified by the Internet Engineering 
Task Force that provides end-to-end communications security over networks by 
scrambling data in transit, preventing hackers from reading it, intercepting it 
or tampering with it. TLS can be enabled for any internet communication or 
online transaction, such as a connection between a mobile shopping website and 
a user’s mobile browser, or between a banking app and the bank’s backend 
servers. The security of those connections is then verified via secure TLS 
certificates.




As of October 2019, a third (33 percent) of Android devices run Android 9 
(Pie), the latest version of the operating system. That makes it the most 
popular Android version. According to Google, apps targeting Android 9 or 
higher automatically have a policy set by default that prevents unencrypted 
traffic for every domain; and, since November 1, all apps on Google Play must 
target at least Android 9.

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