06 September 2025

And Following the Judge's Capitulation to Google

The, "Let's be evil," company will take the first steps toward banning the ability of users to load software of their choice on their computers

By software, I mean apps, and by computer, I mean the device that you hold in your hand to make calls and surf the web, which has thousands of times more computing power, and thousands of times more memory, than was used to put men on the moon.

They are claiming that it is just registration for developers, but we know this sort of enshittification goes. 

Guck Foogle. 

Android's open nature set it apart from the iPhone as the era of touchscreen smartphones began nearly two decades ago. Little by little, Google has traded some of that openness for security, and its next security initiative could make the biggest concessions yet in the name of blocking bad apps. Google has announced plans to begin verifying the identities of all Android app developers, and not just those publishing on the Play Store. Google intends to verify developer identities no matter where they offer their content, and apps without verification won't work on most Android devices in the coming years.

Google used to do very little curation of the Play Store (or Android Market, if you go back far enough), but it has long sought to improve the platform's reputation as being less secure than the Apple App Store. Years ago, you could publish actual exploits in the official store to gain root access on phones, but now there are multiple reviews and detection mechanisms to reduce the prevalence of malware and banned content. While the Play Store is still not perfect, Google claims apps sideloaded from outside its store are 50 times more likely to contain malware.

This, we are led to believe, is the impetus for Google's new developer verification system. The company describes it like an "ID check at the airport." Since requiring all Google Play app developers to verify their identities in 2023, it has seen a precipitous drop in malware and fraud. Bad actors in Google Play leveraged anonymity to distribute malicious apps, so it stands to reason that verifying app developers outside of Google Play could also enhance security.

Bullsh%$.  This is your phone, not a multi ton metal tube that can be flown into buildings.

This is about their locking out developers who creat apps that they don't likd.  ("I'm sorry, but your ID info seems to be non-authentic")

Also, it means that anyone who writes a pro-democracy app in, for example, China, will be ratted  out to the secret police. 

I own my computer, I should be allowed to run whatever software that I choose on it. 

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