For the past 15 years, F-Droid has provided a safe and secure haven for Android 
users around the world to find and install free and open source apps.
When contrasted with the commercial app stores — of which the Google Play store 
is the most prominent — the differences are stark: they are hotbeds of spyware 
and scams, blatantly promoting apps that prey on their users through attempts 
to monetize their attention and mine their intimate information through any 
means necessary, including trickery and dark patterns.

F-Droid is different. It distributes apps that have been validated to work for 
the 
user’s interests, rather than for the interests of the app’s distributors. 
The way F-Droid works is simple: when a developer creates an app and hosts 
the source code publicly somewhere, the F-Droid team reviews it, inspecting it 
to ensure that it is completely open source and contains no undocumented
anti-features such as advertisements or trackers. Once it passes inspection, 
the F-Droid build service compiles and packages the app to make it ready 
for distribution. The package is then signed either with F-Droid’s 
cryptographic key, or, if the build is reproducible, enables distribution 
using the original developer’s private key. In this way, users can trust that 
any 
app distributed through F-Droid is the one that was built from the specified 
source code and has not been tampered with.

Do you want a weather app that doesn’t transmit your every movement to 
a shadowy data broker? Or a scheduling assistant that doesn’t siphon your 
intimate details into an advertisement network? F-Droid has your back. 
Just as sunlight is the best disinfectant against corruption, open source is 
the best defense against software acting against the interests of the user.

# Google’s move to break free app distribution

The future of this elegant and proven system was put in jeopardy last month,
when Google unilaterally decreed that Android developers everywhere in the
world are going to be required to register centrally with Google. In addition to
demanding payment of a registration fee and agreement to their (non-negotiable
and ever-changing) terms and conditions, Google will also require the uploading 
of personally identifying documents, including government ID, by the authors 
of the software, as well as enumerating all the unique “application 
identifiers” 
for every app that is to be distributed by the registered developer.

The F-Droid project cannot require that developers register their apps 
through Google, but at the same time, we cannot “take over” the application
identifiers for the open-source apps we distribute, as that would effectively 
seize exclusive distribution rights to those applications.

If it were to be put into effect, the developer registration decree will end 
the F-Droid project and other free/open-source app distribution sources 
as we know them today, and the world will be deprived of the safety and 
security 
of the catalog of thousands of apps that can be trusted and verified by any and 
all.
F-Droid’s myriad users will be left adrift, with no means to install — or even 
update their existing installed — applications. (How many F-Droid users 
are there, exactly? We don’t know, because we don’t track users or have any
registration: “No user accounts, by design”)

# The Security Canard

While directly installing — or “sideloading” — software can be construed as 
carrying some inherent risk, it is false to claim that centralized app stores 
are 
the only safe option for software distribution. 

Google Play itself has repeatedly hosted malware, proving that corporate
gatekeeping doesn’t guarantee user protection. By contrast, F-Droid offers 
a trustworthy and transparent alternative approach to security: every app is 
free and open source, the code can be audited by anyone, the build process 
and logs are public, and reproducible builds ensure that what is published
matches the source code exactly. This transparency and accountability 
provides a stronger basis for trust than closed platforms, while still giving 
users freedom to choose. Restricting direct app installation not only 
undermines that choice, it also erodes the diversity and resilience of the 
open-source ecosystem by consolidating control in the hands of a few
corporate players.

Furthermore, Google’s framing that they need to mandate developer registration
in order to defend against malware is disingenuous because they already
have a remediation mechanism for malware they identify on a device: 
the Play Protect service that is enabled on all Android Certified devices 
already 
scans and disables apps that have been identified as malware, regardless of 
their provenience. Any perceived risks associated with direct app installation 
can be mitigated through user education, open-source transparency, and existing
security measures without imposing exclusionary registration requirements.

We do not believe that developer registration is motivated by security. 
We believe it is about consolidating power and tightening control over a
formerly open ecosystem.

Continua su

<https://f-droid.org/en/2025/09/29/google-developer-registration-decree.html>

Se Google ci riesce, il DMA è carta straccia.


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