• cum@lemmy.cafe
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    8 months ago

    I have no idea why so many of those commenters are anti consumer rights. Android proves that it’s not a security issue. Why are they so brain broken that they are actively against opening up their walled garden, like it compromise their apple product purchases in some way.

    • stoly@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      For me, security is really the only question here. If you want to, you can find a way to sideload things. But once you have an entire app store out there, suddenly a whole new avenue of attack has appeared that didn’t exist prior.

      • cum@lemmy.cafe
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        8 months ago

        Android already has had this for many years and it is not an issue. We don’t need to deal with hypotheticals here, Android has put these things into practice for a long time already, and it’s a non issue.

        • stoly@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          LOL this is not a hypothetical. there are already bad apps in the regular app store. now you have two.

          also Android has nothing on the security posture of Apple.

          • lolcatnip@reddthat.com
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            8 months ago

            So you admit having a walled garden doesn’t protect you from malicious apps, but you still want on to…protect you from malicious apps?

            • stoly@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              I just want you to envision a moment where the opportunity for two bad things happening is worse than one.

              Honestly I really don’t get the anger here except that everyone has decided that opening the floodgates is the only way forward.

    • histic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      8 months ago

      except it is a security issue for those not tech savvy I had to enable parental controls on some family members phones cause they enabled side loading somehow and managed to royally fuck up their phone

      • cum@lemmy.cafe
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        8 months ago

        Not really, it’s not much of an issue on Android. iOS will probably do the same, but on Android if you sideload an app that could be malicious, the Play Store has play protect and scans malicious apks like an anti virus. But also phones are much better sandboxed and secured then desktop, so their security against malicious software is much stronger.

      • Pluckerpluck@programming.dev
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        8 months ago

        While not impossible, you have to try fairly hard to fuck up your phone like this. I’d be actively impressed if your story is true (particularly as you used the plural), and if so I’d like to know what they were specifically trying to install that fucked up their phones.

        It’s just statistically more likely they downloaded a malicious app from the Play Store than had any chaos side loading.

        • histic@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          8 months ago

          The plural is I just do it now cause i don’t wanna have to deal with it again and I don’t trust them but it was a obvious scam they clicked on and guy over a phone talked her through it

    • milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      I definitely like my computers (including my phone) being open to me, and I love having f-droid on Android.

      Even so, I think there’s a genuine case for security of a walled garden, even though I prefer the alternative.

      Having the option to install 3rd party is another attack surface, and gives a chance for the market - or authoritarian control - to to veer towards not being vetted by that walled garden.

      I.e. if a popular enough developer chooses not to publish through the app store, you either accept their personal guarantees or refuse to use that software. If your job or school decides not to… then what can you do, even if your school is not competent to keep up to date the security of their lowest-bidder bespoke app store?

      But if you can’t side-load, there is no option, which makes them use Apple’s one with its protection.

      I agree, that hasn’t turned out that way on Android… except for phones that don’t support Google Play. I hope it never does…

      • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        That would mean there’s no malware on closed stores, which is simply not true. Besides, you can allow more than one store and still have high security. More to the point Apple doesn’t care about protecting your rights, but their margins. More stores means lost profit and that’s the only thing Apple cares about.

        Also, assuming big companies are more capable of doing proper security is just flawed way of thinking. Just look at Sony whose hacking and leaking credit card numbers is approaching annual levels. If anything I’d say some security nut will do a significantly better job than Apple, because no company does something if they really don’t have to, especially Apple who will opt to glue piece of shoe rubber to push on GPU chip instead of losing a penny on changing soldering paste. And it’s not an isolated case either, on iPhone Max series they removed a single drop of adhesive which made sure chips were strengthened when phone bent slightly. They saved pennies there but that caused user’s phones to lose touch on displays.

        Just repeating their PR statement doesn’t mean that’s the correct way to go.

        • milicent_bystandr@lemm.ee
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          8 months ago

          Fair point, but,

          assuming big companies are more capable of doing proper security is just flawed way of thinking

          Well, Apple and Google have a pretty good track record on that, as records go. Sure, a security nutjob might do better; and the FOSS community has done some amazing and well-trusted things, but not every contender is the same.

          As a bit of a oblique example, I have games in Epic store. Now they (Epic) want to install kernel-level drivers, which I’m not sure I’m willing to accept. If they simply weren’t able, they’d simply do without. I’d rather have Microsoft’s malware than Microsoft’s plus Epic’s. (Side note, apparently I can use an alternative FOSS launcher so that’s great!)

          And still, I prefer it this way - I’d like to have kernel level control on my computer than for Microsoft to ‘protect’ me by disallowing it. But my non-techie friends? I’m not always sure. Especially those in more hostile environments.

          (As another aside, anything that matters on my computer is in Linux and encrypted; but the recent exploit using a bios splash image opens up interesting new inter-platform vulnerabilities.)

          • MeanEYE@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Track record is all that matters. Not a guarantee but a good indicator. Still, Apple is opposing this not because of security but greed.