Google has fastened a bug in Android 14 that locked Pixel customers out of their units

Many Pixel house owners have been left with a nasty style of their mouths after it took Google over a month to repair a critical bug, Ars Technica has reported. It first appeared with the launch of Android 14 again on October eighth, locking some customers with a number of accounts out of their machine's native storage. It impacts a number of units starting from the Pixel 4 to the Pixel 8, and for a lot of customers, it was akin to being locked out of their telephone by ransomware. 

Some people have been unable to unlock their units, whereas others have been capable of boot up however had no entry to lock storage. Nevertheless, the bug rendered some telephones fully unusable, as they’d repeatedly bootloop and by no means attain the house display. Experiences of the problem appeared shortly after Android 14 launched, however Google stored rolling out the buggy launch and solely acknowledged the flaw some 20 days after it appeared. 

The November replace patch is now rolling out, however the preliminary November 2 launch notes weren't very optimistic. Google mentioned customers locked out of their storage could solely get some knowledge again, and people experiencing a bootloop could lose all the things. Today's update, nevertheless, states that customers who have been unable to entry media storage ought to get all their knowledge again as soon as they set up the November patch. 

These caught in a reboot is probably not as fortunate, although. These people will be capable of at the very least rise up and operating once more after submitting a type. Nevertheless Google mentioned that "knowledge restoration options are nonetheless being investigated for units which can be repeatedly rebooting," including that "we'll share further updates quickly."

The sordid episode reveals how Google did not correctly implement its personal much-touted failsafe programs, as Ars Technica famous. It stored rolling out Android 14 with the flaw regardless of a number of stories, and the vaunted twin partition system didn't work as a result of it didn't precisely detect a boot failure. Lastly, it took Google ages to raise the problem to a better precedence, leaving many customers caught with bricked telephones for weeks. "Little did I notice that 'seven years of updates' was not a characteristic, however a menace," mentioned one disgusted person on Google's issue tracker.

This text initially appeared on Engadget at https://www.engadget.com/google-has-fixed-a-bug-in-android-14-that-locked-pixel-users-out-of-their-devices-061040556.html?src=rss

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