This article was published on November 5, 2013

KitKat shows caller IDs from Google Places, Apps customers; adding personal accounts in early 2014


KitKat shows caller IDs from Google Places, Apps customers; adding personal accounts in early 2014

Google formally introduced KitKat, the newest flavor of Android, last week, but the company is still revealing new features of the platform: today it confirmed that the phone app is undergoing a major revamp in KitKat, chief of which is the displaying of caller IDs that are indexed from a range of Google services.

KitKat-powered devices will dip into Google Places and Google Apps to present users with the ability to search for nearby contacts, while the phone will show a name and image for businesses/colleagues that call, and those who you call out to.

The caller ID will pick out businesses from Google Places โ€” perhaps a restaurant round the corner โ€” while the caller ID lookup for Google Apps will make it easy for users of Googleโ€™s business platform to see who is calling from their company. In addition, Google Apps users will be able to find contacts from their company domain using just a name.

But, thereโ€™s more. From โ€œearlyโ€ next year, Google says it will extend caller ID to cover all Google users who have provided a phone number for their Google account. (Itโ€™s not explicitly clear how discoverable personal accounts will be when they are added โ€” we reached out to Google for clarification.)

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This is a pretty big deal and is opt-in only. This means that if you ever provided a number to back your account up, then your name and profile photo are in Googleโ€™s caller ID database โ€”  you can see and adjust your settings here.

kitkat dialler

On one hand these changes are very cool, and people who use Google Apps for business will have a very powerful directory of contacts at their disposal but โ€” as ever with Google and data โ€” some people may  see it as intrusive. Folks that fall into the latter category can opt out of indexing their ID and number โ€” thatโ€™s something worth doing now if you feel so inclined.

Image via Sundar Pichai / Google+

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