Chainfire has just pushed out a new update to suhide that brings its version up to 0.55. This update will now block apps via the package name instead of the UID in hopes to resolve a bug with Google Play Services.
There have been a number of methods to hide root on devices so people could continue to use Android Pay, play Pokemon Go, etc. The latest update to SafetyNet has patched these methods and will no longer let you hide root from Android apps.
Chainfire released an app called suhide that lets you designate which apps you want to hide SuperSU from. This works very well, but it doesn't have a user interface but now there's a companion application from a 3rd-party developer that lets you control it.
Gaining root access to your smartphone can enable you to do way more with your smartphone than you can with traditional apps.
The thing is, some apps (like banking apps) will not run if it detects you are rooted and this is what Chainfire's suhide attempts to resolve.
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