Nokia G11 Plus and Nokia G21 are now receiving new Android 12 builds. Both the smartphones are also receiving the March security update along with the new Android 12 builds. Check below for the update size, list of markets and the update changelog for Nokia G11 Plus and Nokia G21.
For all software update news related to other Nokia smartphones click here. If you want to track February update roll-out to Nokia smartphones you can do it here.
On the basis of tips received from our readers, we will collate a list of markets for Nokia G11 Plus and Nokia G21 in which March security update is now available. So, do let us know if you have received the update in the comments section. You can also try the VPN trick for getting the update and see if it works.
List of markets:
- Nokia G21 in Germany
- Nokia G11 Plus in India
Nokia G21 Android 12 + March security update size:
The update size for Nokia G21 is 39.76MB. It brings Android 12 build V2.640 along with itself. You will either be prompted to download this update, or you can check by going to Settings and searching system updates and then by checking for the update.
Nokia G11 Plus March security update size:
The update size for Nokia G11 Plus is 543MB. It brings Android 12 build V1.430 along with itself. You will either be prompted to download this update, or you can check by going to Settings and searching system updates and then by checking for the update.
Nokia G11 Plus and Nokia G21 March security update changelog:
Both Nokia G11 Plus and Nokia G21 are receiving the 2023 March Android security patch with a new Android 12 Build. The official changelog however mentions generic UI enhancements and stability improvements. Here is what the March 2023 security update addresses as mentioned by Google on its official Security bulletin page.
The most severe of these issues is a critical security vulnerability in the System component that could lead to remote code execution with no additional execution privileges needed. User interaction is not needed for exploitation. The severity assessment is based on the effect that exploiting the vulnerability would possibly have on an affected device, assuming the platform and service mitigations are turned off for development purposes or if successfully bypassed.
Thanks Sven and Uday for the tip. Cheers!!