Note that this is only about the copy made into the important tab. I do still agree it's a stupid way if doing it, but they're not deleting the original that was imported, just the import-copy.
Could it happen that you already deleted the original file because you thought, well I have it in the important tab, but now will lose that copy when Google removes that tab and be left empty handed? Not sure how this tab works
@circuscritic Security wise, it does make sense. Supposedly, you still have these documents in original (edit: I mean, in physical format), and you can scan them once again how many times you want. I imagine it would be worse to simply decrypt these and leave them in a random folder somewhere on users' phones in plain sight, available to any app that would read them.
There are plenty of options for encrypting your files anyway.
I imagine it would be worse to simply decrypt these and leave them in a random folder somewhere on users' phones in plain sight, available to any app that would read them.
Why, did it encrypt and then delete the files that it detected as important when it scanned the device? That's just even worse.
The “Important” tab first arrived in the Files by Google app last year as a feature exclusive to devices in India. Once you choose to use it, the app scans all of the files on your phone to identify anything that may contain a passport, ID, or any other vital documents.
probably don't want to accidentally create an attack surface by dumping previously encrypted sensitive files into unencryped storage at a known location