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Android app blocker permissions

By Brian Tan, founder of BeforeScroll Studio - Last updated: 29 May 2026

Answer: On Android, Prayer First needs Accessibility Service and Usage Access so it can tell when an app you chose is opened and place the Prayer First shield over it. Those permissions are used for blocking behavior only. Prayer First says it does not read screen content, capture keystrokes, or upload foreground app names.

Why Android asks for these permissions

Accessibility Service

Prayer First uses Android Accessibility Service to notice when a selected app moves to the foreground during your lock window. That lets the app show its shield before the feed becomes the first thing you see.

Usage Access

Usage Access helps Prayer First understand foreground app state reliably enough to enforce a user-chosen lock. Without it, the blocker may not know when Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, or another selected app opens.

Installed app list

Android may show permission language for the installed app list. Prayer First uses this so you can pick which apps to lock. The privacy policy says the list stays on your device.

Local unlock state

Prayer First keeps the morning rule, unlock window, selected apps, and completion state as local app behavior. The lock can then work without treating your morning as a server-side profile.

Privacy boundaries

Permission checklist

Android app blocking fails quietly when a required permission is missing, so the setup should be checked in plain language. A working install needs the app list chosen by the user, a lock window, Accessibility Service permission, Usage Access permission, and any manufacturer-specific background setting required by the device.

During setup

Confirm that the app explains each permission before sending the user into Android settings. The page should match the in-app language so users do not feel surprised.

After setup

Open one selected app during the lock window and confirm the Prayer First shield appears. Then complete a Bible app, timer, or journal unlock and confirm the selected app opens normally.

When it stops working

Check whether Android disabled Accessibility Service, whether battery settings restricted background work, or whether the lock window has already ended.

When uninstalling

Revoking the permissions in Android settings or uninstalling Prayer First removes the blocker. Prayer First should never require hidden device-management steps to leave.

Honest limitations

Prayer First is a personal attention tool, not a medical device, counseling service, addiction-treatment product, or impossible-to-bypass lock. Android behavior can vary by device maker, OS version, battery settings, and permission state.

Users can revoke Accessibility Service or Usage Access in Android settings. If those permissions are turned off, the lock feature will stop working or become unreliable. Some Android skins may require additional background, autostart, overlay, or battery settings controlled by the device maker.

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