107 comments

  • grishka 17 minutes ago

    At this point I'm convinced that there's something deeply wrong with how our society treats technology.

    Ruining Android for everyone to try to maybe help some rather technologically-hopeless groups of people is the wrong solution. It's unsustainable in the long run. Also, the last thing this world needs right now is even more centralization of power. Especially around yet another US company.

    People who are unwilling to figure out the risks just should not use smartphones and the internet. They should not use internet banking. They should probably not have a bank account at all and just stick to cash. And the society should be able to accommodate such people — which is not that hard, really. Just roll back some of the so-called innovations that happened over the last 15 years. Whether someone uses technology, and how much they do, should be a choice, not a burden.

    • NullPrefix a few seconds ago

      >They should probably not have a bank account at all and just stick to cash

      Pretty much illegal in some parts of EU

    • guelo a minute ago

      > just should not use smartphones and the internet

      That's ridiculous. Phones are being made more and more of a requirement to participate in society, including by governments.

    • frogperson 9 minutes ago

      Its not society, this is simply more fascism. Corperate and government cooperation to surviel and controll the masses.

      So long as the 5g chips and the 2 mobile app stores remain under control, then 5 eyes has nearly full coverage.

  • astra1701 an hour ago

    This is going to hurt legitimate sideloading way more than actually necessary to reduce scams:

    - Must enable developer mode -- some apps (e.g., banking apps) will refuse to operate and such when developer mode is on, and so if you depend on such apps, I guess you just can't sideload?

    - One-day (day!!!) waiting period to activate (one-time) -- the vast majority of people who need to sideload something will probably not be willing to wait a day, and will thus just not sideload unless they really have no choice for what they need. This kills the pathway for new users to sideload apps that have similar functionality to those on the Play Store.

    The rest -- restarting, confirming you aren't being coached, and per-install warnings -- would be just as effective alone to "protect users," but with those prior two points, it's clear that this is just simply intended to make sideloading so inconvenient that many won't bother or can't (dev mode req.).

    • MishaalRahman an hour ago

      >- Must enable developer mode -- some apps (e.g., banking apps) will refuse to operate and such when developer mode is on, and so if you depend on such apps, I guess you just can't sideload?

      Hi, I'm the community engagement manager @ Android. It's my understanding that you don't have to keep developer options enabled after you enable the advanced flow. Once you make the change on your device, it's enabled.

      If you turn off developer options, then to turn off the advanced flow, you would first have to turn developer options back on.

      >- One-day (day!!!) waiting period to activate (one-time) -- the vast majority of people who need to sideload something will probably not be willing to wait a day, and will thus just not sideload unless they really have no choice for what they need.

      ADB installs are not impacted by the waiting period, so that is an option if you need to install certain unregistered applications immediately.

      • hbn 41 minutes ago

        > ADB installs are not impacted by the waiting period, so that is an option if you need to install certain unregistered applications immediately.

        Someone is just going to make a nice GUI application for sideloading apks with a single drag-and-drop, so if your idea is that ADB is a way to ensure only "users who know what they're doing" are gonna sideload, you've done nothing. This is all security theatre.

        • tbodt 24 minutes ago

          > “For a lot of people in the world, their phone is their only computer, and it stores some of their most private information,” Samat said.

          Not applying the policy to adb installs makes a lot more sense if the people this is trying to protect don't have a computer

          • RulerOf 14 minutes ago

            I've seen a few apps that run locally on Android and hook into the ADB connection over loopback networking to do certain things.

            This just adds the step of "download Cool ABD Installer from the play store" to the set of directions I would think.

          • eclipxe 16 minutes ago

            You can run adb install locally without a computer

            • grishka 11 minutes ago

              If you mean things like Shizuku or local adb connection through Termux, it's quite an awkward process to set up even for someone like me who's been building Android apps since 2011. Like, you can do if you really really need it, but most people won't bother. You have to do it again after every reboot, too.

      • wolvoleo 22 minutes ago

        Do I need to be signed in to Google play to get the sideloading exception turned on? I don't sign in to it because I don't want to have my phone associated with a Google account. But I can't uninstall play completely on the devices I have.

        It says something about 'restart your phone and reauthenticate' that's why I'm asking. What do you autenticate?

        > ADB installs are not impacted by the waiting period, so that is an option if you need to install certain unregistered applications immediately.

        Um yeah but then do I have to install every update via adb? I want to just use F-Droid.

        • catgirlinspace 4 minutes ago

          I think the authentication is doing your face/fingerprint/passcode unlock?

      • kotaKat 42 minutes ago

        So... we're just going to move the scam into convincing the end user to run an application on their PC to ADB sideload the Scam App. Got it, simple enough. It's not hard to coach a user into clicking the "no, I'm not being coached" button, too, to guide them towards the ADB enable flow.

    • andyjohnson0 4 minutes ago

      > some apps (e.g., banking apps) will refuse to operate and such when developer mode is on

      Enable dev mode, sideload the apk, then disable dev mode. I'd argue that it is poor opsec to keep developer mode enabled long-term on a phone used for everyday activities, such as banking.

    • curt15 an hour ago

      The one-day waiting period is so arbitrary. Have they demonstrated any supporting data? We know google loves to flaunt data.

      Something like Github's approach of forcing users to type the name of the repo they wish to delete would seem to be more than sufficient to protect technically disinclined users while still allowing technically aware users to do what they please with their own device.

      • trillic an hour ago

        To paste code into the chrome dev console you just need to type “allow pasting”

      • xnx an hour ago

        > The one-day waiting period is so arbitrary.

        Scammers aren't going to wait on the phone for a day with your elderly parent.

        • free_bip 21 minutes ago

          Brother, there's an entire genre of scamming where the scammers spend months building rapport with their victims, usually without ever asking for anything, before "cashing out". One day is nothing.

        • hbn 33 minutes ago

          Scammers already will spend multiple days on a scam call. Watch some Kitboga videos, he'll strings them along for a week.

          "Google will call you again tomorrow to get you your refund."

          There, we've successfully circumvented all of Google's security engineering on this "feature."

          • fhdkweig 12 minutes ago

            Check out this A&E Intervention episode for Greg. They have continuously worked this guy over for months.

            https://youtu.be/YIR-nJv_-VA?t=121

            They don't mind being patient when they have dozens of other victims in the wait queue.

          • yunnpp 12 minutes ago

            This is obvious to anyone with a brain. I'm not familiar with scam logistics or the videos you mentioned, and the exact same line you put in quotes is what first came to my mind.

            tl;dr of this post is that Google wants to lock down Android and be its gatekeeper. Every other point of discussion is just a distraction.

        • cogman10 an hour ago

          Sure, but what about a 30 minute delay? 1 hour? 2 hour?

          24 is just so long.

          But also, my expectation is that a scammer is going to just automate the flow here anyways. Cool, you hit the "24 hour" wait period, I'll call you back tomorrow, the next day, or the next day and continue the scam process.

          It might stop some less sophisticated spammers for a little bit, but I expect that it'll just be a few tweaks to make it work again.

          • fwip 19 minutes ago

            24 hours is long enough to get them off the phone, and potentially talking to other people who might recognize the scam.

            There will be some proportion of people who mention to their spouse/child/friend about how Google called them to fix their phone, and are saved by that waiting period.

        • nvme0n1p1 33 minutes ago

          Have you ever watched Kitboga? Scammers call people back all the time. They keep spreadsheets of their marks like a CRM. It takes time to build trust and victimize someone, and these scammers are very patient.

          • ronsor 21 minutes ago

            Scammers will gladly wait on hold for 10 hours a day, for a week, if they think they'll get their Bitcoin.

            They have infinite time and patience.

    • rtkwe an hour ago

      > - Must enable developer mode -- some apps (e.g., banking apps) will refuse to operate and such when developer mode is on, and so if you depend on such apps, I guess you just can't sideload?

      What apps are those? I've yet to run into any of my banking apps that refuse to run with developer mode enabled. I've seen a few that do that for rooted phones but that's a different story. I've been running android for a decade and a half now with developer mode turned on basically the whole time and never had an app refuse to load because of it.

      • wolvoleo 25 minutes ago

        Wero in Europe. It's really insane. They make wero to make us less dependent on US tech and then hamstring it in this way.

      • adzm 19 minutes ago

        I enable developer mode on every android phone to at least change the animation durations to twice the speed. I also have never run into an issue fwiw

      • jcelerier an hour ago

        RBC in Canada for instance, just having developer mode enabled blocks it here

    • Dwedit 10 minutes ago

      Medical apps (such as those that talk to insulin pumps) also refuse to run when developer mode is turned on.

    • tadfisher an hour ago

      We'll see when this rolls out, but I don't foresee the package manager checking for developer mode when launching "unverified" apps, just when installing them. AFAICT the verification service is only queried on install currently.

      • MishaalRahman an hour ago

        Googler here (community engagement for Android) - I looked into the developer options question, and it's my understanding that you don't have to keep developer options enabled after you enable the advanced flow. Once you make the change on your device, it's enabled.

        If you turn off developer options, then to turn off the advanced flow, you would first have to turn developer options back on.

    • pmontra an hour ago

      You have to wait one day only once, when enabling the feature. I agree that enabling developer mode could be a problem but mostly because it's buried below screens and multiple touches. As a data point, I enabled developer mode on all my devices since 2011 and no banking app complained about it. But it could depend by the different banking systems of our countries.

      • frays an hour ago

        You don't use the HSBC or Citibank app then I assume?

    • inyorgroove an hour ago

      As described developer mode is only required at install time. Remains to be seen in the actual implementation, but as described in the post developer mode can be switched off after apps have been side loaded.

    • xnx an hour ago

      > some apps (e.g., banking apps) will refuse to operate and such when developer mode is on

      JFC. Why would an app be allowed to know this? Just another datapoint for fingerprinting.

      • tadfisher an hour ago

        Yes, it is really dumb that some of these settings are exposed to all apps with no permission gating [0]. But it will likely always be possible to fingerprint based on enabled developer options because there are preferences which can only be enabled via the developer options UI and (arguably) need to be visible to apps.

        0: https://developer.android.com/reference/android/provider/Set...

      • ninininino 22 minutes ago

        Because estimates suggest Americans lose about $119 billion annually to financial scams, which is a not insignificant fraction of our entire military budget, or more than 5% of annual social security expenditures.

        • wolvoleo 19 minutes ago

          Maybe they should educate them then. Oh wait education is communist. And bad for the religious conservatives.

          • int0x29 10 minutes ago

            Most of the victims were last in school in the 1960s when all this stuff didn't exist. Also from experience teaching people with dementia or memory issues is kinda challenging as they just forget.

    • serial_dev 21 minutes ago

      > This is going to hurt legitimate sideloading … way more than actually necessary to reduce scams

      Google: I already said I love it, you don’t have to sell it to me.

  • janice1999 2 hours ago

    The forced ID for developers outside the Play store is already killing open source projects you could get on F-Droid. The EU really needs to identify this platform gatekeeping as a threat. As an EU citizen I should not be forced to give government ID to a US company, which can blacklist me without recourse, in order to share apps with other EU citizens on devices we own.

    • hactually an hour ago

      you know this is an EU requirement?

      • janice1999 an hour ago

        The DSA covers App stores with a large numbers of users - this is about allowing users side load unsigned apps. Afaik there is no requirement to identify the developers of applications that can be installed on a vendors platform (outside the app store). Otherwise Microsoft would require Government ID to compile and email someone an EXE.

  • politelemon 11 minutes ago

    I'm not in agreement with most of you, hn. They've found a decent compromise that works for power users and the general population. Your status as a power user does not invalidate the need to help the more vulnerable.

    Having to wait a day for a one off isn't a big deal, if they kept it looser then you'd be shouting about the amount of scams that propagate on the platform.

    • varispeed 2 minutes ago

      But this is very rich from them given they serve scam ads with impunity.

      I'd say this has nothing to do with preventing scams, but to make independent software more difficult to distribute.

  • andyjohnson0 9 minutes ago

    I'd rather not have to go through this ritual, but I appreciate that there is a genuine security problem that google are trying to address. I also suspect that they have other motivations bound-up in this - principally discouraging use of alternative app stores. But basically I could live with this process.

    Yeah, I know... Stockholm syndrome...

    Although I may not have to live with it, as none of my present devices are recent enough to still receive ota updates.

    Context: I don't use alternative app stores. I occasionally side-load updates to apps that I've written myself, and very occasionally third party apps from trusted sources.

  • devsda 25 minutes ago

    Death, taxes and escalating safety are the only certainities in this tech dominated world. So, be ready for more safety in the next round few months/years down the line. Eventually Android will become as secure as ios. We need a third alternative before that day comes.

    It's not a win by any means. I hope that we don't stop making noise.

    • wolvoleo 22 minutes ago

      It's not secure when one of the main adversaries (Google) controls all the keys.

      • Mogzol a minute ago

        I believe that is why "escalating safety" and "secure" were written in italics in the comment. Those are the terms Google would use, not necessarily the truth.

  • branon an hour ago

    This 24-hour wait time nonsense is a humiliation ritual designed to invalidate any expectation of Android being an open platform. The messaging is very clear and the writing's on the wall now, there's nowhere to go from here but down.

  • focusedone 2 hours ago

    I'm generally OK with this, but the 24 hour hang time does seem a bit onerous.

    Most of the apps on my phone are installed from F-Droid. I guess the next time I get a new phone I'll have to wait at least 24 hours for it to become useful.

    I'm seriously considering Graphene for a next personal device and whatever the cheapest iOS device is for work.

    • janice1999 an hour ago

      The apps might not be available though. Many developers are simply stopping in the face of Google's invasive policies. I don't blame them. Say goodbye to useful apps like Newpipe.

      • limagnolia 39 minutes ago

        I don't see anything on NewPipe's website about not continuing development?

        • TurboSkyline 18 minutes ago

          A few apps have been showing pop-ups warning users in advance that they are not going to do the verification. Obtanium is definitely on of them. I think I saw something similar on NewPipe.

    • limagnolia 42 minutes ago

      If my employer wants me to use a phone for work, they can buy whatever phone they want for me. I'm not going to buy a separate one just for them.

  • teroshan an hour ago

    That's a lot of words to explain how to install things on the device I supposedly own.

    Wondering how long the blogpost would be if it explained what the flow for corpoloading applications approved by Google's shareholders would be?

  • 9cb14c1ec0 an hour ago

    It's getting harder and harder to be an Android enthusiast. Especially given the hypocrisy of Google Play containing an awful lot of malware.

    • mosura an hour ago

      From a detached perspective Play Services itself is practically sanctioned malware and this is to protect that monopoly.

  • summermusic an hour ago

    24 hour mandatory wait time to side load!? All apps I want to use on my phone are not in the Play Store. So I buy a new phone (or wipe a used phone) and then I can’t even use it for 24 hours?

  • dang 31 minutes ago

    Is there an accurate, neutral third party link about this that we can make the primary link instead?

    https://hn.algolia.com/?dateRange=all&page=0&prefix=true&sor...?

    Edit: I've put one up there now - if there's a better article, let us know and we can change it again. I put the submitted URL in the toptext.

  • wolvoleo 26 minutes ago

    Do you need a Google account to opt out of the restriction? It says something about authenticating.

    I don't have a Google account on my Androids. But I can't remove play services on them, sadly. As an intermediate protection I just don't sign in to Google play, that gives them at least a bit less identifying information to play with.

    I hope this can be done without a Google account.

    • aboringusername 21 minutes ago

      The reauthenticate means using device pin/biometrics if you have them enabled.

      You will not need a Google account.

      • wolvoleo 17 minutes ago

        Oof that's what I was hoping for, thanks!

  • nullc 6 minutes ago

    I'd urge everyone here to seriously consider switching to GrapheneOS. It's a far simpler transition than e.g. switching from Windows or OSX to Linux, and many people find that it has basically no friction vs android.

    More people moving to GrapheneOS is the best tool we have against Google's continued and escalating hostility to user freedom and privacy and general anti-competitive conduct. (Of course, you could ditch having a smartphone entirely..., but if you're willing to consider that you don't need me plugging an alternative).

  • lucasay 20 minutes ago

    The goal seems to be breaking the real-time guidance scammers rely on. 24h probably works, but it feels like a heavy tradeoff for legit users.

  • anonym29 7 minutes ago

    >And what is malware? For [Android Ecosystem President], malware in the context of developer verification is an application package that “causes harm to the user’s device or personal data that the user did not intend.”

    Like when Google, Facebook, Apple, Microsoft, et al. cooperated withš the unconstitutional and illegal² PRISM program to hand over bulk user data to the NSA without a warrant? That kind of harm to my personal data that I did not intend?

    If so, I'd love to hear an explanation of why every Google/Alphabet, Facebook/Meta, and Microsoft application haven't been removed for being malware already.

    š https://www.theguardian.com/world/2013/jun/06/us-tech-giants...

    ² https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/us-court-mass...

  • module1973 an hour ago

    Am I going to have to wait 24hrs to have Google's malware and spyware forceloaded onto my phone, or is this a different category of malware?

    • sebtron 22 minutes ago

      That comes preinstalled :)

  • occz an hour ago

    The 24 hour wait period is the largest of the annoyances in this list, but given that adb installs still work, I think this is a list of things I can ultimately live with.

  • xnx an hour ago

    This is eminently reasonable.

    Now if only Android would allow for stronger sandboxing of apps (i.e. lie to them about any and all system settings).

  • cobbal an hour ago

    Can you set your clock forward or does this also require phoning home to a central server to install an app on your computer?

  • mzajc 2 hours ago

    tl;dr:

    - You need to enable developer mode

    - You need to click through a few scare dialogs

    - You need to wait 24h once

    I wonder how long this will last before they lock it down further. There was a lot of pushback this time around and they still ended up increasing the temperature of the metaphorical boiling frog. It still seems like they're pushing towards the Apple model where those who don't want to self-dox and/or pay get a very limited key (what Google currently calls "limited distribution accounts").

    • throwuxiytayq 24 minutes ago

      Will these measures eliminate fraud? Of course not. What a shame; I guess we'll need to lock down the platform even further.

      This is so overt.

  • tadfisher 2 hours ago

    Honestly, if coerced sideloading is a real attack vector, then this seems to be a pretty fair compromise.

    I just remain skeptical that this tactic is successful on modern Android, with all the settings and scare screens you need to go through in order to sideload an app and grant dangerous permissions.

    I expect scammers will move to pre-packaged software with a bundled ADB client for Windows/Mac, then the flow is "enable developer options" -> "enable usb debugging" -> "install malware and grant permissions with one click over ADB". People with laptops are more lucrative targets anyway.

    • dfabulich 2 hours ago

      I predict that they're going to introduce further restrictions, but I think the restrictions will only apply to certain powerful Android permissions.

      The use case they're trying to protect against is malware authors "coaching" users to install their app.

      In November, they specifically called out anonymous malware apps with the permission to intercept text messages and phone calls (circumventing two-factor authentication). https://android-developers.googleblog.com/2025/11/android-de...

      After today's announced policy goes into effect, it will be easier to coach users to install a Progressive Web App ("Installable Web Apps") than it will be to coach users to sideload a native Android app, even if the Android app has no permissions to do anything more than what an Installable Web App can do: make basic HTTPS requests and store some app-local data. (99% of apps need no more permissions than that!)

      I think Google believes it should be easy to install a web app. It should be just as easy to sideload a native app with limited permissions. But it should be very hard/expensive for a malware author to anonymously distribute an app with the permission to intercept texts and calls.

      • tadfisher an hour ago

        I don't think Google has a strategy around what should be easy for users to do. PWAs still lack native capabilities and are obviously shortcuts to Chrome, and Google pushes developers to Trusted Web Activities which need to be published on the Play Store or sideloaded.

        But these developer verification policies don't make any exceptions for permission-light apps, nor do they make it harder to sideload apps which request dangerous permissions, they just identify developers. I also suspect that making developer verification dependent on app manifest permissions opens up a bypass, as the package manager would need to check both on each update instead of just on first install.

      • yjftsjthsd-h an hour ago

        > But it should be very hard/expensive for a malware author to anonymously distribute an app with the permission to intercept texts and calls.

        And how hard/expensive should it be for the developer of a legitimate F/OSS app to intercept calls/texts?

        • Tostino an hour ago

          Yep, I have a legitimate use case for exactly this. It integrates directly with my application and gives it native phone capabilities that are unavailable if I were to use a VoIP provider of any kind.

          • dfabulich 38 minutes ago

            As a legitimate developer developing an app with the power to take over the phone, I think it's appropriate to ask you to verify your identity. It should be an affordable one-time verification process.

            This should not be required for apps that do HTTPS requests and store app-local data, like 99%+ of all apps, including 99% of F-Droid apps.

            But, in my opinion, the benefit of anonymity to you is much smaller than the harm of anonymous malware authors coaching/coercing users to install phone-takeover apps.

            (I'm sure you and I won't agree about this; I bet you have a principled stand that you should be able to anonymously distribute malware phone-takeover apps because "I own my device," and so everyone must be vulnerable to being coerced to install malware under that ethical principle. It's a reasonable stance, but I don't share it, and I don't think most people share it.)

            • Tostino 17 minutes ago

              I think you read a bit too much into my message. I agree, it's complicated, I don't want my parents and grandparents easily getting scammed.

              But yes they are my devices, and I should be able to do exactly what I want with them. If I'm forced to deal with other developers incredibly shitty decisions around how they treat VoIP numbers, guess who's going to have a stack of phones with cheap plans in the office instead of paying a VoIP provider...

              But no, I have no interest in actually distributing software like that further than than the phones sitting in my office.

        • dfabulich an hour ago

          For a security-sensitive permission like intercepting texts and calls, I'm not sure it makes sense for that to be anonymous at all, not even for local development, not even for students/hobbyists.

          Getting someone to verify their identity before they have the permission to completely takeover my phone feels pretty reasonable to me. It should be a cheap, one-time process to verify your identity and develop an app with that much power.

          I can already hear the reply, "What a slippery slope! First Google will make you verify identity for complete phone takeovers, but soon enough they'll try to verify developer identity for all apps."

          But if I'm forced to choose between "any malware author can anonymously intercept texts and calls" or "only identified developers can do that, and maybe someday Google will go too far with it," I'm definitely picking the latter.

    • msl 24 minutes ago

      > Honestly, if coerced sideloading is a real attack vector, [...]

      I don't believe that it is. I follow this "scene" pretty closely, and that means I read about successful scams all the time. They happen in huge numbers. Yet I have never encountered a reliable report of one that utilized a "sideloaded"[1] malicious app. Not once. Phishing email messages and web sites, sure. This change will not help counter those, though.

      I don't even see what you could accomplish with a malicious app that you couldn't otherwise. I would certainly be interested to hear of any real world cases demonstrating the danger.

      [1] When I was a kid, this was called "installing."

  • omnifischer an hour ago

    Those working in Google (AOSP) that write these code should be ashamed of themselves. Eventually they are doing a bad thing for the society.

    • an hour ago
      [deleted]
  • hypeatei an hour ago

    I'll say it again: this isn't a problem for Android to solve. Scammers will naturally adapt their "processes" to account for this 24-hour requirement and IMO it might make it seem more legitimate to the victim because there's less urgency.

    The onus of protecting people's wealth should fall on the bank / institution who manages that persons wealth.

    Nevertheless, this solution is better than ID verification for devs.

    • limagnolia 34 minutes ago

      Why should the bank/institution be responsible for protecting individuals from themselves? They don't have police power- protecting people from bad actors is like, the reason to have a state. If the state wishes to farm it out to third parties, then we don't need the state anymore!

      • richwater 24 minutes ago

        Yea I have no idea why the original commenter thinks Banks should have the power to tell me what I can and can't do with my own money.

        It's nice that Zelle has checks and identity information shown to you when you're sending money, but if I click through 5 screens that say "Yes I know this person" but I actually don't.....no amount of regulation is going to solve that.

        • hypeatei 19 minutes ago

          Banks absolutely have that power and will stop transactions that seem suspicious or fraudulent already, no? Sometimes they'll call/text to verify you want it go through. I imagine that type of thing but cranked up for accounts flagged "vulnerable" where a family or the person themselves can check a box saying "yes, lockdown this account heavily please" (or whatever you can imagine, idk, I'm not a bank)

      • hypeatei 26 minutes ago

        The bank/institution is where the money is leaving from therefore they should implement policies that protect vulnerable customers like seniors, for example. I don't know how that looks but it seems reasonable that they could put limits on an account flagged "vulnerable person"

        I'm not sure what you're getting at with the rant about police power and a state? Google isn't the government either. What would legislation provide that banks can't already do today?

  • aboringusername 42 minutes ago

    It's not like the Google Play store hasn't been known to host malicious apps, yet you are not required to wait 24 hours before you install apps from their store.

    I suspect they are hoping users just give up and go to the play store instead. Google touts about "Play Protect" which scans all apps on the device, even those from unknown sources so these measures can barely be justified.

    Imagine if Microsoft said you need to wait 24 hours before installing a program not from their store, which is against the entire premise of windows.

    Computing, I once believed was based on an open idea that people made software and you could install it freely, yes there are bad actors, but that's why we had antivirus and other protection methods, now we're inch by inch losing those freedoms. iOS wants you to enter your date of birth now.

    The future feels very uncertain, but we need to protect the little freedoms we have left, once they're gone, they're gone for good.

  • 2OEH8eoCRo0 an hour ago

    Seems like a very reasonable compromise. What's the catch?

    • fsh an hour ago

      I don't find it reasonable that Google wants to make me wait 24h to install software on a device I own.

      • barnacs 13 minutes ago

        Get with the newspeak, it's called "sideloading" now and your corporate overlords get to dictate the terms.

      • ygjb an hour ago

        Meh. I get the annoyance, but it's a one time cost for a small subset of their users. I would prefer if there was a flow during device setup that allowed you to opt into developer mode (with all the attendant big scary warnings), but it's a pretty reasonable balance for the vast majority of their users. (I suspect the number of scammers that are able to get a victim to buy a whole new device and onboard it is probably very low).

    • volkercraig an hour ago

      They'll just remove the "Advanced" ability in a few years once they've frog boiled people into jumping through hoops to use their phone the way they want.

    • janice1999 an hour ago

      Developers, including non-US citizens, are forced to give Google their government ID to distribute apps. This enables Google to track and censor projects, like NewPipe, an alternative open source Youtube frontend, by revoking signing permissions for developers.

      • MishaalRahman an hour ago

        >Developers, including non-US citizens, are forced to give Google their government ID to distribute apps.

        Developers can choose to not undergo verification, thereby remaining anonymous. The only change is that their applications will need to be installed via ADB and/or this new advanced flow on certified Android devices.

        Either way, you can still distribute your apps wherever you want. If you verify your identity, then there are no changes to the existing installation flow from a user perspective. If you choose not to verify your identity, then the installation will still be possible but only through high-friction methods (ADB, advanced flow). These methods are high-friction so anonymous scammers can't easily coerce their victims into installing malicious software.

      • occz an hour ago

        That's not correct - the flow described in the post outlines the requirements to install any apps that haven't had their signature registered with Google.

        That means those apps still keep on existing, they are just more of a hassle to install.

      • codethief an hour ago

        This. Side loading being restricted is only one part of the problem; the other is mandatory developer verification for apps distributed through the Play Store.

      • 2OEH8eoCRo0 an hour ago

        I don't see that on the page

        • janice1999 an hour ago

          They already announced it. Here they only mention the special case where it does not apply:

          > In addition to the advanced flow we’re building free, limited distribution accounts for students and hobbyists. This allows you to share apps with a small group (up to 20 devices) without needing to provide a government-issued ID or pay a registration fee.

          i.e. Government-issued ID and fees are needed for more than 20 devices, e,g, every app on F-Droid

          • ai-inquisitor an hour ago

            Enforcement of the device restriction would also mean they also are collecting information from your device about the app.

        • codethief an hour ago

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

          Note that the OP is about side loading, i.e. installing apps from non-Play Store sources and thereby circumventing developer verification.

    • hermanzegerman an hour ago

      That I have to wait 24 Hours on my own device to install software?

  • silver_sun an hour ago

    It's a little inconvenient for someone setting up a new phone to have to wait a full day to install unregistered apps. But while I can't speak for others, it's a price I'm personally willing to pay to make the types of scams they mention much less effective. The perfect is the enemy of the good.