F-Droid says Google’s new sideloading restrictions will kill the project

Source: Ars Technica

Article note: F-Droid is one of the primary reasons I use Android devices. It lets me get software which is curated to be Free, Open-Source, not subject to vendor tampering, and most importantly non-extractive. Breaking the model of a more open platform is essentially breaking the value-proposition of Android as anything other than "iOS for poors" and I'm astounded Google is willing to do that.

Google plans to begin testing its recently announced verification scheme for Android developers in the coming weeks, but there's still precious little information on how the process will work. F-Droid, the free and open source app repository, isn't waiting for the full rollout to take a position. In a blog post, F-Droid staff say that Google's plan to force devs outside Google Play to register with the company threatens to kill alternative app stores like F-Droid.

F-Droid has been around for about 15 years and is the largest source of free and open source software (FOSS) for Android. Because the apps in F-Droid are not installed via the Play Store, you have to sideload each APK manually, and Google is targeting that process in the name of security.

Several weeks ago, Google announced plans to force all Android app developers to register their apps and identity with Google. Apps that have not been validated by the Big G will not be installable on any certified Android devices in the future. Since virtually every Android device outside of China runs Google services, that means Google is in control of the software we get to install on Android.

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