Google Will Require Developer Verification
Posted4 months agoActive4 months ago
hackaday.comTechstory
skepticalnegative
Debate
60/100
Google Play StoreDeveloper VerificationApp SecuritySideloading
Key topics
Google Play Store
Developer Verification
App Security
Sideloading
Google is requiring developer verification for sideloading apps, sparking debate about the impact on user security and developer anonymity. Commenters discuss the trade-offs between security and convenience.
Snapshot generated from the HN discussion
Discussion Activity
Moderate engagementFirst comment
1m
Peak period
9
0-6h
Avg / period
3.3
Comment distribution13 data points
Loading chart...
Based on 13 loaded comments
Key moments
- 01Story posted
Sep 1, 2025 at 8:10 AM EDT
4 months ago
Step 01 - 02First comment
Sep 1, 2025 at 8:11 AM EDT
1m after posting
Step 02 - 03Peak activity
9 comments in 0-6h
Hottest window of the conversation
Step 03 - 04Latest activity
Sep 4, 2025 at 9:39 AM EDT
4 months ago
Step 04
Generating AI Summary...
Analyzing up to 500 comments to identify key contributors and discussion patterns
ID: 45092076Type: storyLast synced: 11/20/2025, 6:56:52 PM
Want the full context?
Jump to the original sources
Read the primary article or dive into the live Hacker News thread when you're ready.
"With developer verification in the form of sending in a scan of your government ID now mandatory, along with providing your contact information."
How so? I cannot anonymously get a bank account, I cannot anonymously get a phone number, I cannot anonymously get a domain name. I don't see how terrible it is to have to be verified to distribute your app.
Noting that if you worry about banned apps like NewPipe, then first I don't know that Google will prevent its sideloading, and anyway NewPipe is open source so you can build and install it yourself.
All of those are a privacy nightmare as well. Now we add another. The total amount of freedom has diminished.
If it is open source, then I can build and install it myself. If the developer gets verified, then I can sideload it.
I totally agree that device manufacturers should be forced by law to make it possible to run an alternative OS like GrapheneOS, but this topic gets virtually no attention. Whereas everybody seems very pissed about the sideloading story.
I mean if they are above the law, they are above the law. No need to discuss anything. If they are not, then we can discuss what's best for the users. And it is my opinion that allowing alternative OSes is better for the users than allowing sideloading of unverified apps.
Although that might be true for you it's very much false for 99% of Android's user base. Android is a nightmare to compile for, I love to compile on linux/win/bsd but I recall only once or twice compiling Android projects and would do everything to avoid that mess in the future.
For all intents and purposes, we should accept that Android users must be able to install pre-compiled open source software.
In sane operating environments there's the option of reproducible builds, which guarantee that a particular binary comes from a particular source, if Google cared about Android users, they would make that available for Android too.
> I totally agree that device manufacturers should be forced by law to make it possible to run an alternative OS like GrapheneOS.
There's some incongruity here - if users could install any other OS on their phones we wouldn't be having this conversation because 1. nobody would care about side-loading being unavailable and 2. Google would never limit it in the first place due to competitive forces.
In other words, installing other OSes is a high-value goal and it makes sense to use every occasion to put pressure on Google to move in that direction - and there is no better occasion than pushing for open sideloading.
It should be abundantly clear that if you can't get open sideloading you will never get open OS install.
But 99% of the Android's user base doesn't want to sideload (and they shouldn't).
> Android is a nightmare to compile for
I don't know when was the last time you tried compiling for Android, but in the last decade it has been a matter of running `./gradlew build`. If this doesn't work, then the project you are trying to build is badly structured.
> For all intents and purposes, we should accept that Android users must be able to install pre-compiled open source software.
And they are: 99% of Android users install apps from the Play Store, and it works just fine.
> In sane operating environments there's the option of reproducible builds, which guarantee that a particular binary comes from a particular source, if Google cared about Android users, they would make that available for Android too.
It's simply harder than you make it sound, and it only works for open source software (how do you reproduce a build for which you don't have access to the sources?).
> nobody would care about side-loading being unavailable
Sideloading is not becoming unavailable! It will just require being a verified developer if you want to sideload on a Google-certified Android phone. If you actually care, there are enough possibilities to install an alternative OS (though I would recommend GrapheneOS). And if for some reason it's not an option but you still care, you can build the app from source and install it on your Google Android.
> In other words, installing other OSes is a high-value goal and it makes sense to use every occasion to put pressure on Google to move in that direction - and there is no better occasion than pushing for open sideloading.
My point is that this makes no sense! Pushing for unverified sideloading makes strictly nothing for alternative OSes. Let me repeat that: it strictly doesn't help. Alternative OSes are not affected by this new Google policy. They are affected by other issues, but nobody talks about them.
> It should be abundantly clear that if you can't get open sideloading you will never get open OS install.
I think you do not understand how alternative OSes work, because this is plain wrong.
And don't get me wrong: I think we are on the same side. I don't like monopolies. I just feel like fighting against the verified sideloading on Google Android is just completely missing the point.
Never say never. It's a matter of principle - giving in an inch can and will get your head chewed up. As in "I am altering the deal, pray I don't alter it any further" [1]
> I think you do not understand how alternative OSes work, because this is plain wrong.
I do. With proper pressure Google can stop manufacturers from dragging their feet. Say if Android required an unlocked bootloader and a standard API BSP.
> I don't like monopolies.
And they aren't going to de-monopolize themselves. [2]
[1] Darth Android https://pluralistic.net/2025/09/01/fulu/#i-am-altering-the-d...
[2] They brick you because they can https://pluralistic.net/2024/05/24/record-scratch/#autoenshi...
My principle is that I fight for things that bring something, not for the sake of fighting :-).
> I do. With proper pressure Google can stop manufacturers from dragging their feet. Say if Android required an unlocked bootloader and a standard API BSP.
I don't follow. How would having an unlocked bootloader prevent alternative OSes?
2300 comments' worth of discussion from last week