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Google installed 2 hidden apps on your phone without you knowing

650 views· 17 likes· 3:04· Mar 21, 2026

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✅ Secure your Android phone before it’s too late: https://d6df-contact.systeme.io/c9894e83-739c8d76 --- 💼 Business / partnerships: contact@àlamaison.tech --- Is your Android phone really watching you? This is not a conspiracy theory. On most Android smartphones, two system applications installed by Google run in the background — without notifications and without most users even knowing they exist. In this video, I show you how to find these two hidden apps on your phone, what they actually do, and how to remove them if you want to take back control of your device. You will discover: • The Android System Key Verifier app and its role in RCS message encryption • Why this application can see all the apps installed on your phone • The Android System Safety Core app that analyzes certain images received on your phone • How to check hidden permissions of system apps • How to uninstall these apps on Android in a few seconds These features are officially presented as security measures, but many users have no idea they even exist. --- 00:00 – No, this is not a conspiracy theory! 00:23 – App 1 1:36 – App 2

About This Video

Your phone is watching you. And no, I’m not doing conspiracy content here. In this video I show you two Google system apps that are running in the background on most Android phones—installed without asking you, without a notification, and hidden from the normal app list. I walk you through exactly how to find them, what they actually do, and how to uninstall them in seconds if you want to take back control. First, I reveal “Android System Key Verifier.” It’s buried in system app settings, and at first it looks like it has zero permissions—until you open the hidden “all permissions” view. Then you see the big one: it can query every single app installed on your phone. Google says it’s used to verify encryption keys for end-to-end encrypted RCS messages, but I’ll let you decide whether that’s purely security or something else. Second, I cover “Android System Safety Core,” which Google says analyzes images you send/receive in the Messages app to detect erotic content, blur it, and prompt you. They claim it’s on-device only—but again, it was installed silently. The takeaway is simple: maybe it’s not spying, but you didn’t get a choice.

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