There's a new version: I renamed it to DisableContentGuard, so it's not an update, and you should uninstall the previous one.Now that ContentGuard is not open source anymore, we don't know what they are blocking. That's bad. Very bad. Luckily, they're still using the same list The old AntiPiracy is still operational. It consists of two services included in the Settings app. It checks all installed packages, and uninstalls them if they are on the list. To prevent disabling the services, they made some changes to the android framework.The new ContentGuard consists of the function parsePackageUri added to this class . It is called from com.android.systemui.statusbar.phone.PhoneStatusBar in the SystemUI app. When it detects an app on the list, it disables the DefaultContainerService, which is necessary to install new apps.The new DisableContentGuard module disables all these things.