We show you how to access the new Android 12 Privacy Dashboard right here

Android 12’s new Privacy Dashboard is the one place where you can see exactly what apps are using which permissions and when they are doing it. It’s not perfect — Android’s permissions can be a little confusing, and Google isn’t giving up much information about what each of them actually means, but it’s a great addition nonetheless. Getting there isn’t difficult once you know where to look. And remember, the best Android phone doesn’t have Android 12 just yet, so you’ll need to be using a Google Pixel with the Android 12 beta installed.

How to open the Privacy Dashboard in Android 12

  1. Open your phone’s settings menu.
  2. Scroll to the Privacy section and tap the entry.

  3. In the new window that opens choose Privacy Dashboard at the top of the list.

Once you have the Privacy Dashboard open, you can choose a category to see which apps have used the associated permission. You’ll find obvious things like Google Maps using your location and the phone app using your microphone. Still, you might see more surprising things like your favorite game using your location while it’s running.

Why this is useful

The Privacy Dashboard is a single place where you can see how often applications did things you might not want “just any old app” to be able to do. Certain permissions, like location or microphone access — are critical because they can be used in real-time to spy on where you are or what you are doing.

With the Privacy Dashboard, you can see that applications accessed your location (for example). You can see how many apps accessed your location. And with a single tap, you can see a list of exactly which apps accessed your location and when they did it. One more tap teleports you right to the place where you can revoke that permission for that app, so it never happens again.

Android has never had a tool like this before. Apple has long shown you a list of permissions and applications, but even iOS doesn’t have a single spot that’s this easy to use whenever you want to do a bit of a self-audit to check on what the apps installed on your phone might be up to.

The Privacy Dashboard isn’t perfect, but it’s already an awesome tool that you’ll want to take a look at as soon as your phone gets Android 12.

Our top equipment picks

Try Android 12 today

Google Pixel 5

$699 at Amazon
From $650 at Best Buy

Google packed a lot into the Pixel 5, including a 90Hz OLED display, dual cameras, wireless charging, you name it. It’s also the cheapest flagship Pixel we’ve had in a long time, making it a great way to preview Android 12 a little early.

The biggest reason to buy a Pixel phone may be the amazing camera, but another is that you have first dibs on new versions of Android. Android 12 is no different, and you’ll find that the beta version of Android 12 is almost good enough to get shipped out the door to everyone, and the few bugs that remain are the kind most people can live with — if you’re using the Pixel 5. Other older Pixel phones can take part in the Android 12 beta, but the Pixel 5 really does offer the best experience.

Original Article