this post was submitted on 30 Sep 2025
159 points (99.4% liked)
F-Droid
9687 readers
36 users here now
F-Droid is an installable catalogue of FOSS (Free and Open Source Software) applications for the Android platform. The client makes it easy to browse, install, and keep track of updates on your device.
Matrix space | forum | IRC
founded 4 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
Did you see how difficult it was for "Stop Killing Games" to get momentum and be considered by regulators? And that was arguing for products you've already paid for.
Google will argue "security concerns" and point at Apple's practices and easily get a free pass from regulators.
There needs to be an alternative to Android and Apple. Money may be better spent on funding non-Pixel hardware that can use Graphene.
The EU got Apple to open up sideloading. Why would they not stop Google from suddenly doing the same?
Graphene's team is already in communications with an Android OEM, fortunately.
But the thing is that they are not really making Android more secure with this policy.
They are still allowing APKs signed with debug keys to work.. so the only alternative now for any developer that doesn't want to register with Google is gonna be using those debug credentials to sign their app releases. I expect shipping APKs with debug keys will become more common, resulting in objectively a more unsafe Android ecosystem.
This is not gonna stop rogue APKs from outside Google’s store, it’s just gonna make them less secure, since being signed with a debug key means a malicious APK from a different source can produce another version of the app as an "update" and supplant the original.
This is not gonna stop alternative stores either, in fact, it will make it more important to use stores (as opposed to installing apks from github or so), since at least that way they can still implement alternative methods to check package authenticity before installing, even when using debug keys.
None of that logic matters man. Regulators don't understand this shit. Do you think the UK's online age restrictions make anyone safer? It's all bullshit for their own purposes.