Thanks Dianne!

That seems to be the issue. For some reason that was set in the
<application/>. According to the source control logs, that has been
there since day one, generated somehow by Eclipse. I am surprised we
never had this error before.

Is Nexus One just more strict than other devices for this? I am
wondering why none of the other devices in the field emmited this same
behaviour.

On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 12:41 PM, Dianne Hackborn <hack...@android.com> wrote:
> That is saying that your main activity has declared that it requires callers
> have the internet permission to invoke it.  Check to make sure you didn't
> put android:permission="..." for that activity.
>
> On Fri, Jun 25, 2010 at 9:38 AM, Dana Epp <d...@vulscan.com> wrote:
>>
>> Hey guys,
>>
>> I have an interesting problem I just can't seem to get through. I hung
>> out yesterday in the IRC during office hours in hopes to find someone,
>> but I guess the Google guys are swamped and couldn't make it.
>>
>> We have an app that we have tested successfully across 10 different
>> devices on 4 different networks without a problem. However, our app
>> will not work on ANY Nexus One devices, tested across 4 different
>> carriers. The work flow is like this:
>>
>> 1. Via the browser, visit a URL to download the apk file OTA.
>>
>> 2. Install app. App shows up on the device.
>>
>> 3. Click the icon to run the app. An error occurs saying "Application
>> is not installed on your phone"
>>
>> At this point, we can see the app is trying to run. LogCat shows the
>> following interesting bit:
>>
>> 06-22 16:23:53.477: ERROR/Launcher(148): java.lang.SecurityException:
>> Permission Denial: starting Intent { act=android.intent.action.MAIN
>> cat=[android.intent.category.LAUNCHER] flg=0x10200000
>> cmp=com.mycompany.TestApp/.TestApp } from ProcessRecord{44879720
>> 148:com.android.launcher2/10016} (pid=148, uid=10016) requires
>> android.permission.INTERNET
>>
>> The funny thing is, I have android.permission.INTERNET use-permission
>> in the manifest, and no other devices seem to have a problem with the
>> permissions set there.
>>
>> Anyone have any ideas WHY this behaviour is isolated to Nexus One devices?
>>
>> --
>> Regards,
>> Dana Epp
>>
>> --
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>
>
>
> --
> Dianne Hackborn
> Android framework engineer
> hack...@android.com
>
> Note: please don't send private questions to me, as I don't have time to
> provide private support, and so won't reply to such e-mails.  All such
> questions should be posted on public forums, where I and others can see and
> answer them.
>
> --
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-- 
Regards,
Dana Epp
Microsoft Security MVP

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