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Latest comment: 6 years ago2 comments2 people in discussion
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See the References section concerning TchSpot, I have a hunch this is website self-promotion, so I leave this upto an Admin to remove the reference, if my suspicions are correct -- whois: TchSpot is Kumar -- see Kumar's activityWurmWoodeT19:49, 12 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
In the context of the editor's history, unambiguously spam. I have removed it and warned the editor. The editor who uses the pseudonym "JamesBWatson" (talk) 20:53, 12 April 2018 (UTC)Reply
@Npars: Sorry, could you point out to me where it says this in the security bulletin? I can't find anything that'd show that, but maybe I'm tired or something. --Ferien (talk) 20:10, 9 February 2022 (UTC)Reply
The only thing I can see when comparing the previous month is "Updated AOSP version" column does not include AOSP version 9 (Android 9.0 which is Pie). However, the omittance of mention does not mean it's no longer support. – The Grid (talk) 17:41, 10 February 2022 (UTC)Reply
Google does not explicitly announce when a version is no longer supported, they just stop releasing security patches for that version. You can see that the article for Android Oreo also has an "Unsupported" status with a link to a Security Bulletin that contains a list of CVE patches without including Oreo (Android 8 / 8.1). It appears that the status for Pie has now been updated without the citation being correctly changed: see diff - Npars (talk) 17:10, 14 February 2022 (UTC)Reply