Android developer verification: Balancing openness and choice with safety

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At this point I'm convinced that there's something deeply wrong with how our society treats technology.

Ruining Android for everyone to try to maybe help some rather technologically-hopeless groups of people is the wrong solution. It's unsustainable in the long run. Also, the last thing this world needs right now is even more centralization of power. Especially around yet another US company.

People who are unwilling to figure out the risks just should not use smartphones and the internet. They should not use internet banking. They should probably not have a bank account at all and just stick to cash. And the society should be able to accommodate such people — which is not that hard, really. Just roll back some of the so-called innovations that happened over the last 15 years. Whether someone uses technology, and how much they do, should be a choice, not a burden.

This has nothing to do with keeping people safe. If it did then power users could continue to install their own software by being given that ability as a developer setting. The fact that some people are gullible enough to go into a hidden setting on their phone and enable that in order to install an app from a random Chinese website is not a good reason to take away everyone's freedom. Consolidation of power is all this is about.

This has nothing to do with keeping people safe.

...and...

some people are gullible enough to go into a hidden setting on their phone and enable that in order to install an app from a random Chinese website

are kind of contradictory.

It's not a contradiction. Removing that setting solves that problem, but it's not the only solution.

It also only solves that very specific problem. You don't need to side-load an app to scam someone. There's plenty of malware on the play store you can use. And, you don't need malware. There's plenty of legitimate apps you can use for scamming.

And, you don't need an app, I would imagine most scamming is done without an app.

So, really, we're solving a subset of a subset of a subset of a subset of the problem.

yes. Hence, "this isn't about keeping people safe".

The most effective means of hacking is social engineering. You can't solve that with any number of "security measures". If you require all the DNA sources in the world, a scammer will still charm a target into opening it up for them.

Exactly, it's about 'trusted computing' and that never meant your 'trust'.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Trusted_Computing#Criticism

Trusted Computing - Wikipedia

There's much easier ways for gullible people to be scammed than convincing them to install an android app.