After the news cycle recently exploded with the announcement that Google would require every single Android app to be from a registered and verified developer, while killing third-party app stores …
I get that you can only relate your personal experience, and that many people such as yourself don’t know enough about things outside their personal experience to factor them into their perspectives on things.
But, really?!? Just because you don’t do those things - let alone frequently - doesn’t mean there aren’t plenty of others who actually do.
ETA: Not only that, but I think you’re missing something as regards to ad revenue. The apps installed from Play Store virtually always come with ads added for Google to profit from. Not so much on F-Droid.
So you think there’s a lot of people who just browse the play store everyday?
If my personal experience is not enough what about yours? Have you done some kind of research?
About ads that’s just a personal decision by the developer and Google has nothing to do with it. Most developers just publish the same fdroid version on the play store without ads
i think there are quite the range of users, and that neither of us should assume our personal experiences are “the norm.” That said, why do you think there’s been so much discussion about this? There’s obviously a good amount of people concerned, seemingly for good reason.
I’ve not done any significant comparisons between the two app sources, but in what little experience I do have seeing apps in both locations I’m going to guess about a third of those from smaller developers (i.e. not the Mozillas of the world) had ads in the Play Store incarnations. That’s a completely unscientific personal guess, however.
Not that it’s relevant, anyway - the point is having options taken away without legitimate reason for doing so. Google’s own history with malware regularly being found on the Play Store proves that their “justification” is control-freak bullshit. If this is allowed, who knows what other profit-enhancing rules Google will impose further down the road when they’ve eliminated most any escape routes? Open source devs may have to choose to use ads in order just to pay for the privilege of being installable without having to dig too deeply into their own pockets.
I get that you can only relate your personal experience, and that many people such as yourself don’t know enough about things outside their personal experience to factor them into their perspectives on things.
But, really?!? Just because you don’t do those things - let alone frequently - doesn’t mean there aren’t plenty of others who actually do.
ETA: Not only that, but I think you’re missing something as regards to ad revenue. The apps installed from Play Store virtually always come with ads added for Google to profit from. Not so much on F-Droid.
So you think there’s a lot of people who just browse the play store everyday?
If my personal experience is not enough what about yours? Have you done some kind of research?
About ads that’s just a personal decision by the developer and Google has nothing to do with it. Most developers just publish the same fdroid version on the play store without ads
i think there are quite the range of users, and that neither of us should assume our personal experiences are “the norm.” That said, why do you think there’s been so much discussion about this? There’s obviously a good amount of people concerned, seemingly for good reason.
I’ve not done any significant comparisons between the two app sources, but in what little experience I do have seeing apps in both locations I’m going to guess about a third of those from smaller developers (i.e. not the Mozillas of the world) had ads in the Play Store incarnations. That’s a completely unscientific personal guess, however.
Not that it’s relevant, anyway - the point is having options taken away without legitimate reason for doing so. Google’s own history with malware regularly being found on the Play Store proves that their “justification” is control-freak bullshit. If this is allowed, who knows what other profit-enhancing rules Google will impose further down the road when they’ve eliminated most any escape routes? Open source devs may have to choose to use ads in order just to pay for the privilege of being installable without having to dig too deeply into their own pockets.