Something urgent needs to be done quickly for the unexpected bugs and also the behavior in software programs. Sometimes, it is so unpredictable that you will marvel at what went wrong. Android users are encountering a fairly odd little bug; they hear a loud beep toward the end of phone calls. The beep does not even tell the user of something other than the phone call has ended. This bug although experienced only by Android users isn’t precisely an Android bug. It seems to be a bug that Snapchat has added to some Android devices. The fix, as indicated by Reddit user shredditup21 is to turn off phone access for the Snapchat application.
Table of Contents
Fix Loud Beep Toward The End Of Phone Calls
The fix is very simple; you will have to disable phone access for Snapchat. There are two approaches.
The App Permission
Open the Settings app and go to Apps and notifications>App Permissions. Tap on Phone and on the App Permissions screen here, you will see which apps have access to the Phone app. Disable Snapchat here.
App Info
Since there is impressive fragmentation in Android, settings vary from device to device and Android version to Android version. If you don’t see ‘The App Permission’ in the Settings application, there’s another way you can turn off Phone access for the Snapchat application.
Open the Settings application and go to Apps, or Apps Manager, or Apps & Notifications. Here, tap ‘Apps’, or ‘Apps Info’. You will see a list of all the installed applications. Search for Snapchat in this list and tap it. Tap “Permissions” on the Snapchat application data page, and revoke access to the Phone application.
I Don’t Use Snapchat
This seems, by all means, to be a Snapchat created problem but, if you don’t use Snapchat or if revoking Phone access to Snapchat hasn’t solved the issue have a go at revoking Phone access for all apps on your phone. The procedure is the same as it is for Snapchat however if you see the ‘App Permission’ setting in your Settings app, it will be much easier to revoke the access.
Unfortunately, you’re in for a bit of trial and error. You should revoke access to apps and check if the issue goes away. There’s no straightforward approach to figure out which app may be the guilty party. It’s a smart thought, to begin with messaging apps. If you have recently installed a new app that required access to the Phone app, I think you should try removing it or revoking its access to the Phone app.