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someone who's interested in cybersecurity... and online privacy I guess
my blog/ shenaniganshttps://moonwalkers-shenanigans.writeas.com
my new website(under construction)https://moonwalker.codeberg.page
omg, wtf is this shit...
this is the permission list for a "chat application", but I think the name spyware would be more appropriate.
#privacy
@Digol also it was rejected by only one vote (jesus christ they were so close to passing this shit)
@Digol I am well aware that this is not the end, but at this point I'll take this small win.
hopefully the Parliament will reject the rest of it.
it came to my attention that they may have something more in mind. this is not the end sadly (I think)
https://www.heise.de/en/news/End-of-chat-control-Brussels-speeds-up-efforts-for-permanent-solution-11228419.html
#chatcontrol
End of chat control: Brussels speeds up efforts for permanent solution

After the EU Parliament definitively rejected the exception for chat control, the Commission and member states are now focusing on a permanent solution.

heise online
Good news everyone, the chat control thing was rejected in the European Parliament
https://www.heise.de/en/news/Chat-control-EU-Parliament-rejects-extension-again-11225934.html
edit: this is not the end, but at this point I'll take this small w
#chatcontrol
Chat control: EU Parliament rejects extension again

The EU Parliament had to vote again on the Commission's desired extension of "voluntary chat control" – and rejected it.

heise online

#Android is dying.

We all know that #Google wants to kill the “unverified/sideloaded” apps (names carefully selected by Google’s professional gaslighters to give a negative connotation to “apps that are not distributed by Google’s own store”).

We all know that the new “verification process” amounts basically to a ransom where you need to give Google your keys and your money if you want to build apps for Android.

It involves developers handing their signing keys to a user-hostile American company (so they will sign your package for you and will also able to decrypt your secrets) and paying them a $25 fee for each app.

Even if you don’t even use the Play Store to distribute your apps.

This is not a price to pay to get the app distributed through them, nor for using any of their services. It’s a price to pay just because they want to control the whole ecosystem end-to-end, and they know that they can get away with that because you’ll keep using their shitty OS even if you’re outraged at them.

We all know that they got a lot of backlash. And after the backlash they reiterated that they “listened to the community” and would have made a process to still allow people to “sideload apps”.

Well, today that process has been finally unveiled. And it sounds even shittier than I thought.

That’s because Google is currently filled with the best professional enshittificators in the world: the job role of these people is not to build new things, nor to listen to customers and build what they want. No, their job is specifically to find the sweet spot where they can make things as shitty as possible, add as much friction and user frustration as possible to prevent them from doing a certain thing, while still being able to tell regulators “well, it’s not that shitty, you see? We still give users an option - buried under 10 layers of dark patterns”.

In order to install apps external to the Play Store you will have to:

  • Activate the developer settings (the usual “tap the build number 7 times to show the hidden menu” thing)

  • In the developer settings, enable “Allow Unverified Padckages”

  • Confirm that you are not being coerced (seriously, how much malware did they actually see installed by people being coerced or tricked to download and install random APK files?)

  • Restart your device

  • Wait 24 hours

  • Return to the unverified packages settings

  • Scroll past 3-4 additional warnings whose sole purpose is to scare you off

  • Select either “Allow temporarily“ (7 days) or “Allow indefinitely“ (and I’ve got a hunch that the Allow indefinitely option will probably be gradually phased out)

https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2026/03/google-details-new-24-hour-process-to-sideload-unverified-android-apps/

Google details new 24-hour process to sideload unverified Android apps

The "advanced flow" will be available before verification enforcement begins later this year.

Ars Technica

European Parliament votes on extending the derogation of ChatControl 2.0

https://libretechni.ca/post/1034285

@xavierdatatech a social media ban huh? <sarcasm> that is not impossible to enforce or anything</sarcasm>
@xavierdatatech so one will have a question: do you wanna have social media or a bank account