Lenovo says hell-no to monthly security updates for Jokerola devices

Jason Yeaman
Mobile⌘Tech News
Published in
2 min readAug 8, 2016
Jokerola - The joke is in your hand.

Jokerola — The joke is in your hand.

Lenovo and Motorola have great security news

HellNo-vo and Jokerola decide against the effort of monthly updates

Just five days ago, Lenovo stated the Moto Z and Moto Z Force will get software updates containing patches from the Android Security Bulletin; however, the company never included the frequency or timetable of rolling them out. It’s only gone downhill from there as someone speaking on behalf of the Moto brand revealed monthly software updates with security patches are not going to happen.

This is what Ars Technica was told by a company spokesperson:

“Motorola understands that keeping phones up to date with Android security patches is important to our customers. We strive to push security patches as quickly as possible. However, because of the amount of testing and approvals that are necessary to deploy them, it’s difficult to do this on a monthly basis for all our devices. It is often most efficient for us to bundle security updates in a scheduled Maintenance Release (MR) or OS upgrade.

As we previously stated, Moto Z Droid Edition will receive Android Security Bulletins. Moto G4 will also receive them.”

Wait a second… The same goes for the Moto G4? This means your Moto Z or Moto G4 will eventually be updated.

Uh, yikes.

Adding to what is now a disaster for a 2016 flagship is the fact that current or soon-to-be owners of the Moto Z will face even slower arrivals for software updates because the phones are exclusive to Verizon, and we all know how slow Big Red can be getting software updates out to its devices.

Ever since Lenovo took complete control of Motorola, software updates for Moto devices have been way off. The Moto X Pure Edition, for example, was just updated to the May security patch after being stuck on the February version. So not even last year’s unlocked flagship can get a timely software update that’s truly up-to-date.

It’s looking bleak for the Moto Z and the phone has barely been on the market.

Source: Ars Technica

Originally published at imthemobile.guru.

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Jason Yeaman
Mobile⌘Tech News

I cover topics in the mobile space: trends, strategy, business, legislation, philosophy and culture of Mobile technology.