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WhoBIRD is now deprecated on certified Android devices

57 points| proactivesvcs | 5 months ago |github.com

31 comments

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neilv|5 months ago

Google might have to be careful how hard they push on security+greed+control tactics like this.

I think that most of the world is overdue to replace their ubiquitous computing devices with ones not controlled by the US, and the current administration's behavior must be accelerating those thoughts.

(BTW, if a platform were designed for security-first, rather than corporate-surveillance-and-and-passive-engagement-first, it wouldn't as much matter who wrote whatever "app" code ran on it.)

hulitu|5 months ago

> Google might have to be careful how hard they push on security+greed+control tactics like this.

Security ? Which security ? All or nothing ? /s

dns_snek|5 months ago

I'm still waiting to hear what the EU will have to say about all of this, it seems like a very clear violation of the Digital Markets Act to me.

pjjpo|5 months ago

Isn't it the EU that pushed for more details on publishers being public in general? I helped someone get their details registered on the Apple app store before their app would be delisted in Europe.

If details are needed, actually verifying them rather than being any self-reported text seems fairly reasonable.

tremon|5 months ago

They're clearly betting on Trump to strong-arm the EU into dropping the DMA, or not enforcing it on US tech giants. And sadly, it seems like that could work.

starkparker|5 months ago

The same author also put identical wording on all of their actively maintained Android apps (SherpaTTS, Whisper IME, gptAssist, GPS Cockpit, etc.: https://github.com/woheller69)

lexlambda|5 months ago

I assume, since the statement specifically mentions CERTIFIED devices, that they do intend to further develop the app.

As always with Google policies, this means users will need to jump through more and more hoops (as today with custom ROMs and banking apps already). I really hope first and foremost that this policy can be reverted, and if not, that the community develops means of technological circumvention (examples mentioned by others include an "app runner" app or letting others identify the app).

It is a sad state the Android ecosystem is heading to.

proactivesvcs|5 months ago

The app's README has recently been updated to include the statement: "Google has announced that, starting in 2026/2027, all apps on certified Android devices will require the developer to submit personal identity details directly to Google. Since the developers of this app do not agree to this requirement, this app will no longer work on certified Android devices after that time."

nodja|5 months ago

There's a whole subsection of app devs that will just stop making apps for android. Getting graphene or a chinese phone with android won't mean anything because all you will be running is old version of apps since there will be very few devs interested in developing for the platform. The vast majority of people owning an android will be buying "certified" devices which means they can no longer run these apps, essentially drying the whole ecosystem up, which I think is google's goal.

Hopefully this means that a third player will join and provide a truly open android platform.

If an OS is owned and controlled by a single company, it's never truly open. No matter how much they claim it is.

edit: I should clarify, I'm talking about devs that develop for third party stores exclusively. Usually privacy conscious or devs whose apps aren't allowed on the play store for this and that reason like tachiyomi.

hulitu|5 months ago

> There's a whole subsection of app devs that will just stop making apps for android

We're finally getting back to native on our computers. /s

synsynack|5 months ago

Soon there'll be a marketplace, where you can, for a few dollars, "hire a dev". They will use their identity documents and help you in obtaining a signing certificate.

folkrav|5 months ago

This is already what’s happening on iOS devices. Signing services like Signulous[1] basically buy a bunch of developer licenses, and registers your devices on it. The keys eventually end up getting revoked, obviously.

[1] https://www.signulous.com/

nipperkinfeet|5 months ago

Things can only go downhill from here, and it's hard to imagine how things could get any better. I mean, I can only hope Google will change their minds and see sense here.

IlikeKitties|5 months ago

I think people underestimate just how bad this will become. First they will use Remote Attestation against users. Not only will your certified device not run unsigned apps, your uncertified device won't run certified apps (already happening [0]) Than more and more services will require you to own a google certified device. Banks, Governments, Insurance, Postal Service, everyone. (see also [0] for examples)

Soon you'll live in a world where you are forced to own and regularly use a device certified and controlled by either Google, Apple or Microsoft without exception and no way around it.

[0] https://grapheneos.org/articles/attestation-compatibility-gu...

OsrsNeedsf2P|5 months ago

I'm past the point where I care if my next device has "phone" features like calling and SMS. I'm fine with technical limitations, but I'm done with Apple and Google adding artificial ones.

Maybe I'll get a used Librem5. I'd get a Jolla phone, but they don't ship to the US. But honestly in my research, there's been no blogs I can find that compare these 3rd party phones to each other that aren't like 4 years old and outdated.

wishfish|5 months ago

Take a look at FuriPhone. It runs Debian with an Android kernel and runs Android apps in a container. Out of all the Linux phones out there, this is the most interesting one to me. Though I'm still just a bystander. I haven't tried it yet.

https://furilabs.com/

catlifeonmars|5 months ago

The term of art here is “voice-centric”. Where “voice” refers not specifically to voice communications, but the first-class coupling between cellular modems and the IP multimedia subsystems (IMS) core that mobile network operators run to provide VoLTE and messaging services.

It’s a moat designed to protect the incumbents and raise the barrier to entry for any competitors in the mobile networking space.

IlikeKitties|5 months ago

You'll soon find that those phones will be useless because you are required to own a certified device to interact with your government, bank, insurance company, postal service etc. I can see it happen every day.

jrexilius|5 months ago

Graphene has been the best alternative I've found so far.

butz|5 months ago

How hard would it be to rewrite this application to work as web app, or "PWA"? From a glance it would require to record sound, and it is already possible to do using Web APIs. Not sure if models will run fast enough to work in real time, though.

627467|5 months ago

Honestly, this move from Google will probably do more to breaking the duopoly (iOS and certified Android) than anything else. As alternative flavors of Android start appearing hopefully a more open - and less invasive(?) - fork would appear

RedShift1|5 months ago

Fuuuuuuuuuuuuck Google. I bought my device and I want to do with it what I want!

frizlab|5 months ago

And in this instance it makes sense, because the status has changed.

Everyone is pissed at Apple for doing that sort of things, but personally I don’t blame them: they were clear on the restrictions from the start and there are literally no surprises when buying a device from them. If you don’t like that, just don’t buy from them…