Google's June Android Drop Adds Fake Call Detection and AI Features

The app will alert you and terminate the call before you answer.
Google's Phone app now detects spoofed calls impersonating trusted contacts and blocks them automatically.

Each month, the software that quietly governs billions of daily interactions is refined a little further — and Google's June Android update is a reminder of how much the mundane and the urgent now share the same screen. From shielding users against the ancient art of impersonation to helping a teenager's parents know they survived a crash, these changes reflect a civilization increasingly asking its tools to stand watch. The update rolls out unevenly, as most things do, arriving first for those with the newest devices and the right geography — a small but telling detail about how technological protection is still distributed.

  • Scammers who spoof trusted phone numbers now face an automated adversary: Google's calling app can detect the deception and end the call before a word is spoken.
  • A virtual wardrobe tucked inside Google Photos signals the company's ambition to colonize more of daily life, turning a photo library into a personal styling tool.
  • Children under 13 gain a quiet safety net — medical details and emergency contacts surfaced on a lock screen, visible to a stranger in a crisis when a child cannot speak for themselves.
  • Teenagers riding in cars or on transit can now have crash detection silently watching, ready to alert a parent if something goes wrong — a feature that compresses enormous anxiety into a background process.
  • The rollout is deliberately staggered: Pixel owners get changes now, while other Android users and regions wait, a reminder that even universal tools arrive unevenly.

Google's June Android update arrives with a clear dual focus: protecting users from deception and weaving the company's apps more deeply into the rhythms of everyday life.

The headline security addition lives inside Phone by Google, which can now identify when an incoming call originates from a different device than the one your contact normally uses — a tell-tale sign of spoofing. When fraud is detected, the app warns the user and ends the call automatically. The feature launches first on Pixel devices worldwide, with broader Android compatibility to follow. It works well for most people, though it carries an implicit assumption: that your contacts don't regularly switch phones.

Google Photos is stepping into new territory as a virtual wardrobe, letting users catalog clothing from their photo libraries and experiment with outfit combinations without leaving the app. The feature begins rolling out next week in the United States, India, and Brazil on Android 10 and above, with Canada expected to follow shortly after.

The Personal Safety app is extending its reach to younger users in meaningful ways. Children under 13 can now surface medical information and emergency contacts on their lock screen — details that could matter enormously when a child is unable to communicate. Teens gain crash detection that notifies parents or guardians after a collision, even in someone else's car or on public transit. Older teens unlock Safety Check and real-time location sharing with emergency contacts, giving families more layered options for staying connected during crises.

Elsewhere, Google Play Books adds a Catch Me Up recap tool for readers returning to long-abandoned books, along with in-app passage highlighting and Q&A. Quick Share expands its cross-platform reach, working with Apple's AirDrop on more Android devices and reducing friction between the two ecosystems.

Taken together, the update reflects Google's steady strategy of embedding security and convenience into Android's core — rolled out carefully by region and device, with Pixel owners first in line and everyone else watching the horizon.

Google is rolling out its June Android update with a focus on security and daily convenience, starting with a feature that catches one of the oldest tricks in the scammer's playbook: the spoofed call pretending to come from someone you know.

Phone by Google, the company's calling app, can now detect when an incoming call is actually originating from a different device than the one your contact normally uses. If a scammer is impersonating a trusted number, the app will alert you and terminate the call before you answer. The feature is launching first on Pixel devices globally, with plans to expand to other Android phones later. For most users this is straightforward protection, though it does raise a practical question for the minority who regularly switch between devices—the system assumes your contacts stay on the same phone.

Beyond security, Google Photos is taking on a new role as a personal stylist. The app can now catalog clothes from your photo library and let you experiment with outfit combinations virtually, browsing and mixing pieces without leaving your phone. This wardrobe feature begins rolling out next week, initially in the United States, India, and Brazil on devices running Android 10 or newer. Canadian users should see it arrive soon after.

The Personal Safety app is expanding its reach to younger users. Children under 13 will gain access to features that display medical information and emergency contacts directly on the device lock screen—information that could prove critical in a crisis. Teens can activate car crash detection, which alerts parents or guardians if they're in a vehicle that experiences a collision, whether they're riding in a friend's car or on public transit. Older teens gain access to Safety Check and real-time location sharing with emergency contacts, giving families more granular control over how they stay connected during emergencies.

Google Play Books is introducing a recap feature called Catch Me Up, designed to help readers remember plot points and character arcs from books they've been reading over time. The app is also adding the ability to highlight passages and ask questions about them without leaving the app—a small but meaningful shift toward keeping readers engaged within Google's ecosystem rather than sending them elsewhere for analysis.

Finally, Quick Share, Google's file-sharing tool, is expanding compatibility to work with Apple's AirDrop on more Android devices, chipping away at the friction between the two platforms when users want to exchange files across the divide.

These updates reflect Google's strategy of layering security, convenience, and ecosystem integration into Android's foundation. The rollout is staggered by region and device type, a pattern that suggests the company is testing stability before wider deployment. For Pixel owners, the changes arrive immediately; for everyone else, the timeline depends on which feature and which country.

A Conversa do Hearth Outra perspectiva sobre a história
Inventor

Why does Google need to detect fake calls at all? Isn't that something carriers should handle?

Model

Carriers do block some spoofed calls, but they work at the network level. Google's approach is different—it's looking at whether the call is actually coming from your contact's device. A scammer can spoof a number the carrier doesn't catch, but they can't fake the device signature.

Inventor

So it's like checking the fingerprint of the phone, not just the phone number.

Model

Exactly. The number can lie. The device can't, at least not easily. That's why it's more reliable.

Inventor

The wardrobe feature in Photos seems almost frivolous next to crash detection for kids. Why bundle them together?

Model

They're both about reducing friction in daily life. One prevents a scam, one prevents a fashion crisis, one prevents a parent from not knowing their kid was in an accident. Google sees Android as the operating system for your whole life, not just emergencies.

Inventor

But doesn't the wardrobe thing require you to have already photographed your clothes?

Model

Yes. It's only useful if you've built up a library. That's why it's a slow rollout—they're betting people will start doing it once they see the feature exists.

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