this post was submitted on 01 Sep 2025
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It's always nice to read Corey eating at the buffet of corporate shenanigans and leaving no crumbs.
If this developer registration really comes to pass and/or has staying power, I suspect there will be eff it we will just fork it movement. A FOSS Tyzen or Fire version of Android that would then not go back to whatever Google does with their Android updates. That would probably work better if all the privacy-friendly Android devs banded together, which probably won't happen.
At the same time, I don't think the last word has been spoken on Google's plans here. They haven't implemented it yet. And even if/when they do, I suspect there will one or two courtrooms that will hear about this shit in excruciating detail. If European devs could rally behind this flag there is a good chance the EU will use its golden formula of 50% good intentions and 50% wanting to eff American tech giants to intervene on privacy grounds.
Maybe. But then we'll have a Google fork, a Samsung fork, a Motorola fork, an LG fork...
I think there will be fork and there will be fork. A company like Samsung will continue to take what Google churns out, put their more proprietal stuff on it, and ship it. Probably not as Tyzen any more but who knows. I suspect a FOSS fork will never go back to Google after the last version that didn't require this dev register check. They will find a way to maintain feature parity with it but it will be delayed.
Forks haven't worked that well for Samsung Tyzen or Amazon because they never gained enough users, nor probably contributed they enough to the bottom line given the investment. It remains to be seen whether the more privacy conscious people can move the needle enough for a FOSS version.