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522 points josephcsible | 1 comments | | HN request time: 0.196s | source
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itg ◴[] No.45570037[source]
Installing any app I want outside the Play Store was the primary reason I decided to go with Android, despite most of the people I know using iPhones. If I can't do this anymore, I may as well switch and be able to use iMessage and FaceTime with them.
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jadbox ◴[] No.45570261[source]
You can still install apps outside the play store, but the developer does need to verify their signing information. Effectively this means that any app you install must have a paper trail to the originating developer, even if its not on the app store. On one hand, I can see the need for this to track down virus creators, but on the other, it provides Google transparency and control over side loaded app. It IS a concerning move, but currently this is far from 'killing' non-appstore apps for most of the market.
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1. GeekyBear ◴[] No.45572345[source]
Google is following the same game plan we saw when they decided that the full version of uBlock Origin (the version that is still effective on YouTube) should no longer be allowed within their browser monopoly.

The fact that there was a temporary workaround didn't change the endgame.

It's just there to boil the frog more slowly and keep you from hopping out of the pot.

It's the same game plan Microsoft used to force users to use an online Microsoft account to log onto their local computer.

Temporary workarounds are not the same thing as publicly abandoning the policy.