F-Droid and Google's Developer Registration Decree | F-Droid - Free and Open Source Android App Repository (f-droid.org)
from ooli3@sopuli.xyz to privacy@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 15:44
https://sopuli.xyz/post/35681146

#privacy

threaded - newest

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 24 Oct 15:56 next collapse

This is something the EU should really regulate, unfortunately they are busy regulating oat milk drink and veggieburgers.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 16:06 next collapse

the eu is way too busy chewing us boot atm

technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 24 Oct 17:36 collapse

It’s a banker’s cartel. Nothing more.

technocrit@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 24 Oct 17:36 next collapse

Pretty sure the EU was designed to serve the interests of carnists and other capitalists.

persona_non_gravitas@piefed.social on 24 Oct 18:17 next collapse

I contacted the EU DMA team a while back. Part of the response:

We have taken note of your concerns and, while we cannot comment on ongoing dialogue with gatekeepers, these considerations will form part of our assessment of the justifications for the verification process provided by Google.

So at least some part of the bureaucracy are aware of it.

doleo@lemmy.one on 25 Oct 01:13 next collapse

That’s the copy pasta I got, too!

BarHocker@discuss.tchncs.de on 25 Oct 22:42 collapse

Same

med@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 23:36 collapse

The thing I don’t understand about any of this, is why can’t you comment on ongoing dialogues with the gatekeepers?

I understand the basic tenants of keeping the discussion closed until official statements can be prepared, to prevent the press and the public from going off half cocked. That makes sense for private matters.

This is not private. I can’t understand what is the point of negotiating law for people if they can’t even see the ongoing process?

mistermodal@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 21:40 next collapse

I’m confused why so many open source developers think that the EU is going to be the foster parents of FOSS communities

caseyweederman@lemmy.ca on 25 Oct 01:41 next collapse

It’s because they did a thing with USB once

drspawndisaster@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 03:07 collapse

There’s a real effort in some EU countries to fund FOSS projects to get out from under US dominated tech.

artyom@piefed.social on 25 Oct 03:44 collapse

  1. The EU hasn’t even been able to stop Apple from doing this shit.

  2. The EU is actively preventing their own people from leaving the Google ecosystem with the Play Integrity API in their own apps.

Kirk@startrek.website on 24 Oct 16:34 next collapse

When will F-Droid stop working on stock android?

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 24 Oct 16:38 next collapse

Try Graphene today. IT WORKS

Kirk@startrek.website on 24 Oct 16:39 next collapse

I don’t have time today

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 24 Oct 16:42 collapse

Ok, I’ll extend your deadline til Monday then. ;)

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 24 Oct 17:38 next collapse

Samsung s22 and s25, checking in. Graphene won’t be viable for the vast, overwhelming majority of Android users today or in the coming seasons.

I hope people figure out some kind of virtualization/docker-containerization solution to the coming Goo-lag.

Ferk@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 18:36 next collapse

Samsung s22 and s25

I’m still holding some hope that maybe Samsung’s flavor of the OS won’t have the restriction of requiring Google keys. Specially considering that Samsung has its own “Galaxy Store” with app submissions controlled by them, not Google.

Though it’s possible they might simply extend the signatures accepted to include also the ones signed by them ^^U …still it would give them a competitive edge to remove the restriction so they might be incentivized to do it.

source_of_truth@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 02:42 next collapse

I’m hopeful that the hackers will win. I will never underestimate the power of motivated, scorned engineers.

Ferk@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 09:38 next collapse

I mean, you can hack/root most devices, even right now. I expect that’s not changing.

Axolotl_cpp@feddit.it on 25 Oct 23:14 collapse

Probably by removing some google service or some other gimmick it can be bypassed

kmacmartin@lemmy.ca on 25 Oct 02:44 next collapse

If they want a lot of play store banking apps + other things that opt into play protect to work they’ll need to add the signature verification requirement.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 04:40 next collapse

I’m even willing to use the web apps or webpages for banking, if the browsers can make the handshakes. I’ll forfeit using the bank first party apps, if their websites are full featured.

kmacmartin@lemmy.ca on 25 Oct 04:55 collapse

100%, my bank thankfully doesn’t tick that box, but if it did I wouldn’t think twice about dropping the app. Freedom is more important.

Ferk@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 09:42 collapse

Will the banks in Korea, EU and many other areas where Samsung phones are very common keep that restriction if it meant alienating that many users? I doubt it. That’s why I think the support of a big player on this would be a killing move.

Also I’m not 100% convinced that it’s impossible to have some verification without it depending on this one change.

kmacmartin@lemmy.ca on 26 Oct 02:01 collapse

That’s a really good point, basically throw their weight around a bit eh?

dRLY@lemmy.ml on 30 Oct 01:43 collapse

Would be nice, but I imagine that Samsung would both need to actually be impacted in an meaningful way with their store, and find some way to prevent Play Services (which they have to meet requirements to be able to load on their devices) from just nope-ing non-registered apps. Both of which I seriously doubt would happen.

They have already been working pretty close with Google on things that removed their actual Tizen OS from stuff like their watches in favor of merging their code into Android Wear OS. Would also guess that they might just work something out to either force apps on their store to be signed by Samsung and cleared by Google. Or that they just require apps on their store to only be listed after registering with Google. Not like Samsung really cares about supporting side-loading if the apps aren’t in their (or Google’s) store.

Sadly I think only a OEM like Samsung would have the massive levels of hardware sales and money for making a real fight against Google. F-Droid and other alt-stores or projects lack both and are easy to ignore. If Samsung were to be actually concerned about this, then I think we would have already seen them filing lawsuits and pushing posts/news articles condemning Google’s plans like F-Droid keeps doing (aside from lawsuits due to money).

Ferk@lemmy.ml on 30 Oct 09:48 collapse

You are probably right… it’s just one hope I had, I’m not expecting it to happen, but I’ll be hopeful until the end.

Hope for the best, prepare for the worst.

dRLY@lemmy.ml on 01 Nov 04:19 collapse

Nothing wrong with finding small hopes here and there where you can. I too had briefly thought about Samsung’s store (I have an S24 Ultra, Tab S8+, and my old S20+) maybe being large and known enough by more users than F-Droid. But their lack of press releases pushing back on Google was what told me enough. If Samsung’s store was actively used more than the Play Store on their phones (and had enough really popular apps that weren’t also on the Play Store), then it would at least be something.

Sadly even if Samsung’s store is able to somehow get a pass by Google, I highly doubt that the devs of apps that are only on F-Droid would list them on there. And would still only help Samsung devices (though I know I would start using Samsung’s store a lot more if those devs did list them on there). Though I might find reasons to use my S20+ for some apps that I like having but don’t use daily, and my tablet is on Android 15 so it will be used for stuff I use more often (never thought I would be excited for it to not get major updates).

The main actively used daily app that I am dreading losing (due to the current dev not planning to ever list their active fork on Play Store) is SyncThing-Fork on my Android devices (use different SyncThing apps for PC/Steam Deck). It has been the only multi-platform sync program that actually works correctly for my password vault on my Android devices. Though it is possible that the dev might get it whitelisted, but I am not going to hold my breath. As the main dilemma on a per app level is that the more apps that fall in line ends up supporting Google’s actions, but at the same time not getting whitelisted means just going away (at least on fully updated Android 16+ devices).

[deleted] on 25 Oct 00:27 next collapse

.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 04:35 collapse

I literally named two different phone models, and I think dismissing that people are often bound to what handsets are available to them is … Well, honestly just cruel.

Most of us don’t have the cash to throw down for phones all the time and we need scalability to protect ALL of us, not just those of us cash flush.

My fingers are still crossed folks figure out some containerization or virtualization solution between now and the Goo-lag.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 05:25 collapse

It’s better to work a few hours to buy a good device than waste thousands searching for a fantasy solution. Phones are bought rarely, not ‘all the time’. If you can’t afford basics, fix the money problem first, privacy can wait.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 14:45 collapse

“Job” is a precious commodity for many of us.

You understand that people who live in the developing world, and have hostile governments that will weaponize Meta/Google’s data and telemetry against them, ALSO deserve privacy and liberty with their devices too, right?

This is why I’m saying that being prescriptive about what hardware we use is not the end game.

It’s going to have to come from the software platform.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 15:01 collapse

Do you live in the developing world? Is your government banning this phone? How can we help others if we can’t help ourselves?

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 15:40 collapse

I live in a country where the government is now weaponizing the mobile data on our phones to track us, and assault us. They have begun kidnapping citizens without due process and incarcerating people with legal status, without even filling charges.

These state agencies are buying tech that let’s them follow people around by their phones, and the leading mobile platform companies are openly complicit with governments that assault their people.

When you ask if I’m living in the developing world, I travel international a lot but my home country is experiencing rapid decline, and they have banned several categories of phone manufacturers, most famously Huawei consumer products. Ironically, because that company is suspected of doing the same things that Google is doing (granting access to back-end services and data to government entities).

So it’s really not about any one device.

The people affected by this state violence (a ) deserve privacy just like anyone else, and (b ) depend on their mobile devices for every part of their daily life just like everybody else.

How are you going to help them, when you can’t even help yourself?

Nobody can “help themselves” with a technology platform. It taken cooperation with others, to make systemic changes.

Again, I personally will be fine. I can buy a Chinaphone. Or I can fund a Linux project phone for myself. Or, gods help me, I could buy an iPhone.

But what about the people on the other end of the line? What good is one secure walkie talkie?

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 15:57 collapse

s22 and an s25, where’s the cooperation and systemic change there?

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 16:55 collapse

I’ve responded, repeatedly, and at length to you. I’ve treated you like you want to be a responsible member of community. I’ve tried to treat you with benefit of the doubt.

You have generally replied with pithy, two-liner insults and red herrings. I feel comfortable now just disregarding you.

I hope someday you find your way to kindness.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 17:18 collapse

If your rejecting solutions without offering one, you’re not entitled to an thesis length reply. Anyone can write a long comment with ChatGPT. I won’t fall into that trap.

artyom@piefed.social on 25 Oct 03:44 collapse

There are many other “uncertified” ROMs.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 04:38 collapse

And the bootloader is now locked down across Samsung’s ecosystem, as of this year. Sucks.

If you move to using an unsecured “chinaphone” as an alternative to the big three handset vendors, then it’s unlikely they are target devices for the myriad of uncertified ROM’s.

I think we are going to need software solutions that can run on major Androdis distributions across the variety of hardware.

I think we’re going to need something like UTM or Docker (virtualization or containerization) for running our unsigned Android apps and services, and I don’t know how feasible it will be.

3abas@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 08:21 collapse

If you move to using an unsecured “chinaphone” as an alternative to the big three handset vendors, then it’s unlikely they are target devices for the myriad of uncertified ROM’s.

Not following your logic here… With the mainstream devices now locked, “the myriad of uncertified ROMs” will necessarily shift to the remaining unlocked phones, or die out.

I think a viable future is owning two devices, one “certified” to access your banking and work apps, and one running GrapheneOS for your private life.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 14:55 collapse

ROMs rarely work as one-size-fits-all-devices, yeah?

I only know of four smartphone categories of phones that are really available in the markets around the world today, en masse.

  1. The big tentpole phones available from Samsung, Google, Moto, and maybe two other players.

  2. Boutique devices from vendors like Nothing and Fairphone with limited reach to global markets (like, being Euro only, or being only distributed in markets that can buy into they ideology, etc). Nearly all of them prices or is MOST humans’ reach.

  3. Chinaphones. A mix of fly-by-night brands with ghost shifts in factories that make many varieties of phones with other people’s designs, but have extremely limited first party support and probably zero ROM support from the global community … And then the handful of tech markings like Xiami, HTC, Huawei, and anyone else that bends the knee to the CCP. Virtually no NA market penetration in this decade, and tremendous barrier for entry, for most of the Western world. Also, security issues galore.

  4. iPhones.

All that to say, I don’t think a more featured OS existed it’s the way forward, with people all jockeying to make new ROM’s for everyone to NOT be able to run on their phones.

I’m hopeful folks smarter than I will be able to come in about the potential for sandboxes in it phones with their own capacity for running unsigned apps, like a virtualization platform.

z3rOR0ne@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 22:01 next collapse

Even on GrapheneOS, sure it uses a sandboxed Google Play Store, which is obviously great for users, but the developers of Android apps still have to hand over their personal data to Google specifically as this new decree from the Lords of the Google fiefdom entails.

Because FOSS developers rightly value their personal privacy, this decree effectively kills incentive for FOSS developers to continue making and maintaining apps for Android. Running GrapheneOS doesn’t circumvent this.

It’s like I’m saying “I’m hungry” and you say “Go for a run, it’s healthy for you.” I mean… it’s true that running is healthy… but the act of running doesn’t solve the problem of me being hungry…

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 24 Oct 22:07 next collapse

I use FOSS apps for everything, I only have one special user profile with google play store for my stupid bank and credit card.

For everything else there are alternatives that don’t need google play.

Chulk@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 23:57 collapse

I think you’re missing the point. You say you use FOSS apps for everything. Do you download them from F-Droid?

From the article:

The future of this elegant and proven system was put in jeopardy last month, when Google unilaterally decreed that Android developers everywhere in the world are going to be required to register centrally with Google. In addition to demanding payment of a registration fee and agreement to their (non-negotiable and ever-changing) terms and conditions, Google will also require the uploading of personally identifying documents, including government ID, by the authors of the software, as well as enumerating all the unique “application identifiers” for every app that is to be distributed by the registered developer.

The F-Droid project cannot require that developers register their apps through Google, but at the same time, we cannot “take over” the application identifiers for the open-source apps we distribute, as that would effectively seize exclusive distribution rights to those applications.

If it were to be put into effect, the developer registration decree will end the F-Droid project and other free/open-source app distribution sources as we know them today, and the world will be deprived of the safety and security of the catalog of thousands of apps that can be trusted and verified by any and all. F-Droid’s myriad users will be left adrift, with no means to install — or even update their existing installed — applications. (How many F-Droid users are there, exactly? We don’t know, because we don’t track users or have any registration: “No user accounts, by design”)

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 25 Oct 00:19 next collapse

I get my apps through Obtainium. I usually find the developers pages where they publish source code and the apk and then add them to Obtainium and install from there and let it manage the updates.

Most of the apps I use are also available on f-droid and some probably have play store versions as well.

SlartyBartFast@sh.itjust.works on 26 Oct 00:22 collapse

This is how I do it too

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 00:52 collapse

F-Droid libre software, self-hostable, unstoppable.

beyond@linkage.ds8.zone on 24 Oct 22:08 next collapse

As I understand it the sandboxed google apps are entirely optional. You can go completely free with GrapheneOS just like with LineageOS.

jkYkM7a@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 05:25 collapse

Too, you can shove Google into its own separate User from everything else and keep it locked down in an always on VPN or the like. You don’t owe it the primary user on your phone. You can even keep that user shutdown such that none of it runs until you explicitly switch over and run it.

GrapheneOS is pretty dang impressive.

[deleted] on 24 Oct 23:19 next collapse

.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 00:50 collapse

Wrong, sandboxed Google Play is not required.

Evotech@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 08:02 collapse

Except for stuff you really need like online banking, tap payments and digital ids

Neo@lemmy.sdf.org on 25 Oct 10:25 next collapse

Personally I don’t need or want any of those things on my phone.

AnyOldName3@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 12:15 next collapse

Plenty of bank apps work just fine. None of the ones I’ve tried had problems, except Santander, which works perfectly after changing a setting.

Evotech@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 17:25 collapse

Not here in Norway. You need BankID which is an app that well, requires a lot of stuff.

bluemoon@piefed.social on 26 Oct 01:53 collapse

get the physical button-device sent to you by ypur bank

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 25 Oct 14:09 next collapse

Manageable.

manuallybreathing@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 15:38 next collapse

You can do online banking via a browser, it’s clunky but you generally just need to be more prepared

Evotech@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 17:24 collapse

Yeah, but over here you pretty much forced to use aome sort of mobile 2fa

Zetta@mander.xyz on 25 Oct 20:58 next collapse

All my banking apps and credit card apps have worked flawlessly on Graphene OS. You’re correct that tap to pay doesn’t work, which is a bummer. But that is just Google spyware as well, honestly.

I heard about this a while ago, but I remember the GrapheneOS team talking about suing Google if they didn’t allow them to pass play integrity checks like they should be able to, but Google just doesn’t let them. That’s the only reason tap to pay doesn’t work and some baking apps have issues, its Google purposefully limiting graphene OS so they have a competitive edge somewhere.

Evotech@lemmy.world on 26 Oct 00:00 collapse

Sadly not the case here.

jabjoe@feddit.uk on 25 Oct 22:35 collapse

No they work. It’s not like LineageOS. Both Bank apps I now need, work on GrapheneOS but did not on LineageOS. It is my compromise without being compromised.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 25 Oct 22:57 collapse

Ok what about my tags? What about notifying me if tags are following me what about tsp to pay what about satellite messaging.

eleitl@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 16:57 next collapse

Don’t wait. GOS just works.

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 17:18 next collapse

On one phone. The rest of are shit out of luck because we didn’t buy the one phone from the company that is causing the problem in the first place.

eleitl@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 17:25 next collapse

Buy used. The other phone vendors haven’t been offering the security hardware GOS needs, so far. It might change soon enough though.

DishonestBirb@lemmy.world on 24 Oct 17:36 collapse

This isn’t awful advice, but used Pixel prices are vastly out of whack with used prices from just about any other android manufacturer. On Amazon I can currently buy a refurbished Galaxy S25+ for $300 less than a refurbished Pixel 9 Pro XL - when the Pixel is a worse phone by every metric but its ability to run GOS.

Also, in some markets (US I believe? I think its a company called Verizon that does this) Some pixels just cannot be OEM unlocked, at all. So that’s also a risk buying used online at least - there’s usually not a way to tell if you’d be getting one of those if you live in a market that has this fucked up “feature”.

stink@lemmygrad.ml on 24 Oct 17:36 next collapse

You can always buy used!

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 17:52 collapse

Where does one find a used phone? I would have no idea.

More importantly, I don’t want a used phone, OR to have to spend more money.

Cris16228@lemmy.today on 24 Oct 18:04 next collapse

Then accept what they’re doing

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 18:06 collapse

I dont really have a choice do I?

Also, this isn’t just phones: I am using Fdroid on several TV devices too.

This really, really sucks.

krolden@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 21:31 collapse

Yes, you do. But you’re making the wrong one

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 21:33 collapse

What do you recommend for non pixel devices then?

krolden@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 05:15 collapse

Why non pixel?

krolden@lemmy.ml on 24 Oct 21:31 collapse

Ebay

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 21:34 collapse

Yuck. Nope. A used phone from a rando? No way in hell. Usb likely worn out, battery half the life of new… No.

krolden@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 05:20 collapse

www.ebay.com/itm/266812035484

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 06:57 collapse

Not really a fan of Ebay. Getting a used slightly worn phone doesn’t seem like a good idea. The usb C on every phone I have had (if it gets clean or not) starts to not work as well if at all, and the battery is certainly not going to work to 100 percent any more.

krolden@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 07:01 collapse

They’re open nox

beyond@linkage.ds8.zone on 24 Oct 21:58 next collapse

They’re working with an (unrevealed) major OEM to bring a compatible device to market sometime next year.

old.reddit.com/r/GrapheneOS/comments/…/nivsx0k/

Here’s hoping its a device with an SD card slot and optionally a 3.5 jack. The Pixel’s lack of those is the one reason I haven’t made the switch.

JamesBoeing737MAX@sopuli.xyz on 26 Oct 09:00 collapse

Apparently not. But it will later come to other cheaper offerings of the company which will probably have a headphone connector.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 00:36 collapse

Change phones. You’re rejecting solutions without offering one.

LiveLM@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 01:21 next collapse

You can’t even buy a damn Pixel on Brazil, one of the countries set to receive the change first on Google’s roadmap.
Being stuck on a single phone brand is never gonna be the solution.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 01:49 collapse

You clearly have internet, so buy it from anywhere in the world. You’ve given zero solutions. It’s like want us to give up. I’m not giving up on my privacy.

LiveLM@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 16:58 collapse

The solution is making noise. Talking to your local regulators, making them know this is an issue worth looking into.
The solution is pushing your government to do their fucking job and regulate these companies so they can’t take blatant anti-costumer measures.

I’m not saying GrapheneOS isn’t a solution, it absolutely is, what I’m saying is that it isn’t the be-all and end-all, nor is it available for everybody, and coming into the comments to say “just buy a pixel duh” is smug as shit, and also missing the forest for the trees.
The solution is stopping Google from rolling out this change so everybody can enjoy the increased privacy sideloaded, FOSS apps bring, not just Graphene users.

Hell, Graphene themselves are suffering from Google’s fuckery in relation to security patches and AOSP. (Image, Original Link)
Getting Google in a big antitrust lawsuit so they’ll stop being actively hostile to projects built on top of Android would be very beneficial to Graphene, don’t you think?


Wanna talk demoralizing? How about hearing “just buy a pixel and install GOS” on every thread on this topic completely ignoring whole countries where this isn’t exactly feasible?
And when you try to point that out you get the most dismissive answer ever completely ignoring import taxes and a zillion other factors that make even used Pixels cost more than brand new phones that are head and shoulders above them specs wise?

Demoralizing you? Be so for real dude. You really think I’m part of a psyop trying to make you give up your OS? Rest easy, I won’t reach thru the screen and snatch your phone.
Just know Graphene needs no negative marketing. If every user walks around talking like this about the project they’ll have plenty already.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 17:05 next collapse

Thanks for spelling out all of this. I was you to know the I read every word of it.

The guy we both were responding to managed to waste an hour of my own day with back-and-forth so I figured it was worth seeing how others had torn apart the nonsense, and while I knew the issues in a theory level you explaining Brazil’s ecosystem was an excellent illustration I learn from.

Good luck out there. May we someday both learn to evade feeding the trolls.

LiveLM@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 17:09 collapse

It’s nice to know that my multi-paragraph unhinged angry rants on Lemmy get read by other people sometimes lmao.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 17:11 collapse

“There are dozens of us! DOZENS!”

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 17:11 collapse

The solution is pushing your government to do their fucking job and regulate these companies so they can’t take blatant anti-costumer measures.

Now you’re giving a solution. Led with that.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 18:09 collapse

Bruh. Read the room. You have been taking swings at everyone in these threads and basically telling anyone that can’t beg, borrow or steal a Pixel to fuck off.

Nobody should take you seriously when you talk about discouragement. I asked how you and I could encourage our community today and you told me not to worry about folks in the developing world that can’t “work a few extra hours” for a mythical premium handset.

This was your smartest reply today.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 18:34 collapse

Wrong, only if you’re rejecting solutions without offering one.

Wrong again, we should take the blatant solutions available to us, before preaching to other countries.

lemmy.world/comment/20134562

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 01:55 next collapse

Uh huh. And the devices that are not phones?

And saying just change your phone, much easier said than done isn’t it?

My actions… Piss off.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 02:01 collapse

Computers don’t need Android.

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 02:43 collapse

For fucks sake: my tablet, my android tv, a firestick…

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 02:59 collapse

Computers can output to televisions and a tablet computer is a type of computer. You’ve given zero solutions. It’s like want us to give up. I’m not giving up on my privacy.

NewNewAugustEast@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 05:45 collapse

That makes no sense…

I am not trying to demoralize anyone, this situation just sucks.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 16:59 collapse

Yeah, no, don’t take it personally. He’s just been attacking anyone in the threads that doesn’t buy into his prescribed “solution” while trying to also be some kind of victim-martyr.

Thanks for being here. Community needs vice and we will have to find a way, together, to back the creators that can actually code the paths forward.

lightnsfw@reddthat.com on 25 Oct 02:49 collapse

Dude, just fuck off. Your solution does not work for everyone. Pixel phones don’t even have an SD slot ffs.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 03:06 collapse

Get a USB-C memory stick for your phone. Stop acting like this stuff’s impossible.

lightnsfw@reddthat.com on 25 Oct 12:33 collapse

Get a USB-C memory stick for your phone. Stop acting like this stuff’s impossible.

So it’ll take 3 dongles just to bring my music collection with me? That’s stupid. I’m not offering solutions because there are none. Phone manufacturers and Google have fucked us. My current phone is 8 years old because there are no good options that have The hardware I want. The only hope is the FOSS community and they decided to back one of the most useless phone models that is made by the biggest offender. Might as well buy an iPhone at this point for all the good it will do.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 13:54 next collapse

We don’t need 100 million songs on our phones. We can have 10 million songs.

Privacy is more important than a stupidly large music collection.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 16:58 collapse

Ironically, with an iPhone you could at least buy into Test Flight privately-signed-apps.

Anyhow, it took me a couple days to realize the guy that you and I have both been replying to is just a troll. Thanks for explaining your thoughts through this discussion, and try not to be too demoralized by the guy.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 24 Oct 17:40 collapse

This isn’t a scalable solution. There aren’t enough affordable, used Pixels for everyone in the ecosystem to adopt between now and the Goo-lag.

eleitl@lemmy.zip on 24 Oct 18:24 next collapse

Alternative ROM market is fringe de la fringe, so there’s sufficient used hardware available. I bought my 7a for 320 eur new and my tablet for 400 eur new though, so the Google tax (or, GOS tax, rather) was moderate.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 03:29 next collapse

At least they’re trying.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 04:46 collapse

  1. It’s not a “solution” if it doesn’t solve for most of us. Likely you and I both need to federate with others for results because I’m honestly not a qualified software developer but …

  2. Modern flagship phones have more than enough resources to run non-gaming app’s within some other container or even with full virtualization or, worst case scenario, emulation. We desperately need folks to figure out porting Dockerlike platform tools and making them accessible for normies like me.

If we can run an entire Windows environment and, separately, if we can run Hades II on a yesteryear Samsung, we should be able to get a sufficiently sandboxed environment together that’s qualified to run the weather apps and calculator apps I run on FDroid.

Because I’ll be god-damned if I’m going to entrust Google’s calculator app with my contacts and phone status permissions.

Not to say I’m entitled to any of their labor but I would join a crowdfunding program in a heartbeat.

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 06:06 collapse

If you can’t buy a phone should you be gambling on crowd funding.

cardfire@sh.itjust.works on 25 Oct 14:42 collapse

I carry an S22 (with no Google services allowed on it) and an S25. I could buy any flagship phone in cash and not blink. Most folks around you and me don’t have this kind of privilege.

I’m fine.

I’m saying that we can’t ask or expect everyone to have the means to do so, AND that tellibg all of them to buy Pixels to fund the very company that is fucking everyone over, in hopes they leave the bootloader for those phones unlocked indefinitely, is basically just complying in advance.

While you’re busy insulting me and others, I seriously think we need a campaign to empower devs because the solutions are going to have to come from software, and that takes real people’s labor, talent and time. That is solely what I’m advocating for.

This is your community. It rises or falls with how we treat each other. How can you and I encourage each other, today?

autonomoususer@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 15:49 collapse

I seriously think we need a campaign to empower devs because the solutions are going to have to come from software, and that takes real people’s labor, talent and time. That is solely what I’m advocating for.

Great, agreed. Wish more led with this.

jkYkM7a@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 05:27 collapse

One con, too, is that Graphene drops support when Google does, limiting the options around buying quite older models and running them for a long time to keep price low.

I still appreciate GrapheneOS and understand why they drop support, but it is definitely a con compared to other ROMs which trend towards extending support longer.

artyom@piefed.social on 24 Oct 18:51 next collapse

Depends on your location. There is a timeline table here:

https://developer.android.com/developer-verification/guides

Landless2029@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 23:28 collapse

I see September 2026 as a tough date.

Catalyst_A@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 04:18 collapse

There’s nothing set in stone yet. Google just committed to doing it is all that’s happened so far. But the response against it has been pretty heavy and we’ll see how it goes. We have to speak up right now and organize our communities like this post is doing.

null_dot@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 25 Oct 14:07 collapse

LOL. There’s dozens of us here.

nieminen@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 03:21 next collapse

I honestly didn’t realize how the fdroid deployment worked, and now I’m gonna be way less skeptical of apps I see there.

mukt@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 15:19 collapse

I do not go to Google play until apps on f-droid prove inadequate for my usage.

amos@mander.xyz on 25 Oct 10:36 next collapse

Considering Google and Apple both donate to Trump, we really need an alternative: Linux mobile OS. A linux OS that can be installed on a range of phones, from cheap to more expensiove. Just buy the phone and install the OS, as you do on PCs.

myszka@lemmy.ml on 25 Oct 12:44 next collapse

Good linux mobile OSs already exist, but phones’ hardware is still proprietary and messed up, so it is very difficult to provide a good hardware support for those mobile OSs

mulcahey@lemmy.world on 25 Oct 15:23 next collapse

Yes, the bottleneck isn’t software, it’s hardware. We need phones with unlocked bootloaders

Auli@lemmy.ca on 25 Oct 22:55 collapse

Good is used looy here.

dreaperxz@lemmy.zip on 25 Oct 23:48 next collapse

Will the F-Droid website shutdown as a whole if the project ends?

I’ve gone back to flip phone. Yes, an XP3 Plus running android; but with no app store and no apps that use Internet. Data, and WIFI is off forever. It just comes with basic apps out of the box. Nothing Google is on it. It’s just for phone calls.

And I’ve gone back to a standard MP3 player. All this because the smartphone ecosystem is utterly chaotic and fragile. Anything smart is nothing but a headache to me now. Smartphones are anything but convenient to me today (they are more like dopamine slot machines with the trash social media apps that come pre-installed on them to keep people scrolling).

But I have an old Samsung tablet running LineageOS that I just use for reading. Never put it online. And I see no reason to update any apps. Maybe in the future, I might consider installing other apps (highly unlikely). But I’m fine with how it is. And since Syncthing is no longer an option on Android, I’ll just use Rsync to sync my books directly to the micro SD card I use with it.

I don’t use anything Google anymore (yes, not even YouTube). And I really don’t want to install Google’s shitty app store and make a new Google account (after getting rid of all my Google accounts). This is why I’m wondering what the plan is for the F-Droid project.

Is it time to just dump anything Android too? Unless it’s a scaled down version of Android that comes with the device like my flip phone?

SlartyBartFast@sh.itjust.works on 26 Oct 00:19 next collapse

Syncthing is no longer an option on Android?

dreaperxz@lemmy.zip on 26 Oct 02:08 next collapse

That’s what I heard. They discontinued it. But it’s been forked.

I just think it’s best to drop anything Android now; and truthfully, just stop bothering with smartphones at this point. Or don’t use Android for much other than in a locked down phone that comes out of the factory with no Google BS; like the XP3 Plus flip phone I bought for a fraction of the price that a trash smartphone would be.

To be frank, I don’t use Android for much of anything now. I’ve completely given up the smartphone. I don’t miss it. And honestly, it’s a relief.

oeuf@slrpnk.net on 26 Oct 15:35 collapse

I’m using syncthing-fork.

RodgeGrabTheCat@sh.itjust.works on 27 Oct 10:50 collapse

I’m using Syncthing-Fork on Android and Syncthing on Linux. Works very well.

brucethemoose@lemmy.world on 26 Oct 02:17 next collapse

I am not on Android now, but…

…Can folks not just dual-boot?

Like, keep a stock partition to make Play Store apps happy, and a “main” GraphemeOS boot option or whatever.

ChaosSpectre@lemmy.zip on 26 Oct 03:07 collapse

To my knowledge no. Theres also the issue of hardware. For example, I stupidly gave samsung another chance about 3 or so years ago, and you basically cannot put another OS on their devices without bricking them.

TheCynicalSaint@lemmy.ml on 26 Oct 06:40 collapse

Can one just remove GSF and bypass this? Or is it something going to be built into Android going forward? Genuinely curious.