• squiblet
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      291 year ago

      That doesn’t say they take 70% of our money. It means that Google spends only 30% of what they take in on the store on operating it, which is very different.

  • sebinspace
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    51 year ago

    So does the OS. It’s done that from the beginning, but it doesn’t prevent it outright. Who gives a shit?

  • @Greggo@lemmy.world
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    221 year ago

    Ironically, I see articles every month telling android users to uninstall a slew of shit malware apps that were on the play store. Thanks Pichai, but I’ll take my chances with more reputable sources.

    • @Squizzy@lemmy.world
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      11 year ago

      Scan them with play protect, it’s an amazing piece of development that makes me feel truly safe in what I install on Google’s device they have lended me.

  • @spudwart@spudwart.com
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    71 year ago

    I really can’t wait until we have a Linux-Mobile OS which supports android apps rather than having an entire fucking operating system running on java.

    Running your OS on java is like building your house on quicksand.

    • @jack@monero.town
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      11 year ago

      I don’t think Android apps will be necessary on Linux mobile, at least GNOME is working on making their apps mobile-compatible

      • @spudwart@spudwart.com
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        51 year ago

        To transition from Android to Linux Mobile, It absolutely will be. Some apps are only on Android/iOS and some desktop linux desktop apps do not support a mobile layout even on mobile linux.

    • @bAZtARd@feddit.de
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      71 year ago

      Java is only the languages some apps are programmed in. There is no JVM in android. And no, the OS does not run on Java.

    • @Canuck@sh.itjust.works
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      51 year ago

      Both GNOME & KDE already have builds you can do this with. E.g. Mobian, which uses a lot of the work Purism has done with PureOS, is working to make even default Debian work. You can install Android apps with Waydroid, and install it on Android devices like Pixel, OnePlus, in addition to Linux native devices.

      • @thedeadwalking4242@lemmy.world
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        21 year ago

        It’s really not consumer ready though, I’ve tried desperately to use OnePlus and like devices as daily drivers but it’s just not there yet sadly. The more people that try tho the better off we will be

  • Sparking
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    191 year ago

    So they argue that they want to protect users… from epic games? Like they are going to make a virus filled app? I kinda agree people need to be protected from fortnite, but its kind if a silly disingenuous argument.

  • @theherk@lemmy.world
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    321 year ago

    If neither Google nor Apple took such a massive rake on the payments, fewer people would take issue with the main app distribution implementations. They have valid reasons for trying to keep you in their ecosystem, but those are severely undercut by taking such a huge percentage.

  • ConditionOverload
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    961 year ago

    Honestly been steadily becoming less happy with the way Google/Android has been going even since Pichai took over.

        • @iawia@feddit.nl
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          1 year ago

          It’s a term coined by Cory Doctorow, Sci-Fi writer and ex-EFF, who has been writing about (tech) monopolies, and in particular monopsonies, and how those types of two sided markets originally grow by given users something they need, often for an artificial low price or even free, until they dominate that side of the market, after which they focus mostly on the other side of the market, in this case advertisers, and step by step, slowly dismantling the reason users originally liked their product… Enshittification.

          Doctorow has lots to say, so here’s a link.

          • Sandra
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            71 year ago

            Now that the concept has caught on so widely, I’ve often wished @pluralistic@mamot.fr had gone with a less scatological term. But maybe that is part of the reason it caught on 🤷🏻‍♀️

            @technology@lemmy.world

    • @interceder270@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      Funny how search engine giant Google doesn’t implement a filter for “no ads, no in-app purchases.”

      People might actually be able to find what they’re looking for instead of what google wants them to find.

  • MudMan
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    71 year ago

    That article is… very confusingly written. Anybody got another source with a direct, full quote?

  • Sandra
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    1501 year ago

    That’s rich when the Google Play store is full of malware while F-Droid is full of gems.

    @technology

    • LUHG
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      101 year ago

      Google’s ADS as a whole are malicious. Try Google drivers or TeamViewer and the first sponsored links are malicious/adware. It’s absolutely shocking.

      I added ublock origin into my clients GPO to protect myself from viruses. Msoft just as bad if not worse since we are all using their products to be protected from.

    • @mycatiskai@lemmy.one
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      1 year ago

      Is there a good guide on f-droid and sideloading you recommend?

      If it is something that Google doesn’t recommend then I should probably be doing it.

      • Gunpachi
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        11 year ago

        I’m gonna suggest droidify . It’s basically a good looking f-droid client.

        Just download the apk and install it.

      • Mint_Raccoon
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        211 year ago

        All you have to do is download the APK from the F-Droid website and enable installing from third-party/unknown sources in the Settings app (some versions of Android ask automatically when you try to open the APK). I also recommend disabling unknown sources for your browser once you’re done as a security measure.

      • @NicoCharrua@lemmy.ca
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        151 year ago

        For F-Droid in specific, you’ll need an F-Droid client. I use Droid-ify (GitHub) (F-Droid) (IzzyOnDroid), but you can use whichever you prefer. F-Droid is a good source for open source apps.

        If you’re sideloading from different sources, Obtanium (GitHub) (IzzyOnDroid) is useful to download apps, and keep them updated. You can even kinda use it as an F-Droid client.

        Google is pretty lax on what it allows on Google play, so unless you’re trying to avoid using Google services or you want to install apps that aren’t on the play store, you don’t need to do it.

        If you want adbocking and extra features in some apps (especially YouTube), check out ReVanced.

        Google isn’t lying - there are risks to sideloading if you don’t know what you’re doing. Make sure what you’re downloading is coming from legitimate sources you trust. For example, if you look up ReVanced, some unofficial websites show up which may have malware. Triple check everything is coming from an official source.

    • @makingStuffForFun@lemmy.ml
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      231 year ago

      This is the real truth. Man, the gall of that guy.

      Hi, we are a spyware company. Be aware. Don’t load apps that don’t meet our surveillance metrics. Only download our spyware. Thank you.

      Screw that guy. How about only sideload. There’s another world out there, and it doesn’t equate to surveillance capitalism.