Business Google will block sideloading of unverified Android apps starting next year - Google says it's no different than checking IDs at the airport.

Suggested I&T threads to sperg:
https://kiwifarms.st/threads/sideloading-general.209934/
https://kiwifarms.st/threads/android-hate-thread.175965/
https://kiwifarms.st/threads/your-current-and-next-phone.103205/


Google says it's no different than checking IDs at the airport.

Ryan Whitwam – Aug 25, 2025

Android's open nature set it apart from the iPhone as the era of touchscreen smartphones began nearly two decades ago. Little by little, Google has traded some of that openness for security, and its next security initiative could make the biggest concessions yet in the name of blocking bad apps. Google has announced plans to begin verifying the identities of all Android app developers, and not just those publishing on the Play Store. Google intends to verify developer identities no matter where they offer their content, and apps without verification won't work on most Android devices in the coming years.

Google used to do very little curation of the Play Store (or Android Market, if you go back far enough), but it has long sought to improve the platform's reputation as being less secure than the Apple App Store. Years ago, you could publish actual exploits in the official store to gain root access on phones, but now there are multiple reviews and detection mechanisms to reduce the prevalence of malware and banned content. While the Play Store is still not perfect, Google claims apps sideloaded from outside its store are 50 times more likely to contain malware.

This, we are led to believe, is the impetus for Google's new developer verification system. The company describes it like an "ID check at the airport." Since requiring all Google Play app developers to verify their identities in 2023, it has seen a precipitous drop in malware and fraud. Bad actors in Google Play leveraged anonymity to distribute malicious apps, so it stands to reason that verifying app developers outside of Google Play could also enhance security.

However, making that happen outside of its app store will require Google to take a page from Apple's playbook and flex its muscle in a way many Android users and developers could find intrusive. Google plans to create a streamlined Android Developer Console, which devs will use if they plan to distribute apps outside of the Play Store. After verifying their identities, developers will have to register the package name and signing keys of their apps. Google won't check the content or functionality of the apps, though.

Android-Developer-Console.webp
An early look at the streamlined Android Developer Console for sideloaded apps.

Google says that only apps with verified identities will be installable on certified Android devices, which is virtually every Android-based device—if it has Google services on it, it's a certified device. If you have a non-Google build of Android on your phone, none of this applies. However, that's a vanishingly small fraction of the Android ecosystem outside of China.

Google plans to begin testing this system with early access in October of this year. In March 2026, all developers will have access to the new console to get verified. In September 2026, Google plans to launch this feature in Brazil, Indonesia, Singapore, and Thailand. The next step is still hazy, but Google is targeting 2027 to expand the verification requirements globally.

A seismic shift​

This plan comes at a major crossroads for Android. The ongoing Google Play antitrust case brought by Epic Games may finally force changes to Google Play in the coming months. Google lost its appeal of the verdict several weeks ago, and while it plans to appeal the case to the US Supreme Court, the company will have to begin altering its app distribution scheme, barring further legal maneuvering.

Android_Verification_Banner02-copy.webp

Among other things, the court has ordered that Google must distribute third-party app stores and allow Play Store content to be rehosted in other storefronts. Giving people more ways to get apps could increase choice, which is what Epic and other developers wanted. However, third-party sources won't have the deep system integration of the Play Store, which means users will be sideloading these apps without Google's layers of security.

It's hard to say how much of a genuine security problem this is. On one hand, it makes sense Google would be concerned—most of the major malware threats to Android devices spread via third-party app repositories. However, enforcing an installation whitelist across almost all Android devices is heavy handed. This requires everyone making Android apps to satisfy Google's requirements before virtually anyone will be able to install their apps, which could help Google retain control as the app market opens up. While the requirements may be minimal right now, there's no guarantee they will stay that way.

The documentation currently available doesn't explain what will happen if you try to install a non-verified app, nor how phones will check for verification status. Presumably, Google will implement this whitelist in Play Services as the implementation date approaches. We've reached out for details on that front and will report if we hear anything.
 
Frankly, the consolidation of the Internet right now is worrying. I assume the end point is linking every account online to your face and ID. I wonder if we'll see them successfully wipe Kiwi Farms from the clearnet altogether.

Anyway, does anyone know of any good open source OSes that can run most APKs? I want to de-google as much as possible but there are a handful of apps I don't want to lose.
 
From my brief research Graphene and Calyx seem to be the only good options unless you want to go full linux.
Calyx is currently in hibernation due to losing some high level people. I hope they come back, but even though I used it myself, I can't recommend it right now.
 
Best case this pushes more resources into GrapheneOS short term, and long term into Linux on mobile.

Unfortunately with the way the younger generations are gobbling corporate balls, things are not looking good for the future of personal computing.
 
Ever since jewgle forcibly updated my Android version and removed the older version stock images from their website, I have been forced to do more research on smartphones and their brand policies than I would like to (simply because i want a phone with more than 4gb ram, a replaceable battery, no locked down CPU, and doesn't automatically fucking die in water) and have completely become horrified at what I found.
Namely, how very few companies are actually giving out their Stock ROMs at all nowadays because they find it more profitable to force people to go to repair stores just to get a fucking stock ROM to flash. The other issue being that some CPUs actually do lock down your phone and prevent rooting entirely, such as Unitek CPUs in some chinkshit phones. Not only that, but then you have the scene of custom ROMs, where developers have to keep MULTIPLE fucking brands of phones in mind just to be able to develop them.
Smartphones are becoming more and more of a walled garden in many small and subtle ways that go under our noses. Except the walled garden is India.
Also seriously, what the fuck, I miss the days when batteries were replaceable.
 
The problem is that these anti-sideloading measures will also completely destroy the third-party app ecosystem for Android. Sure, you can get around them by installing custom ROMs, but the people that do that are just a tiny percentage of android phone owners. Because of this, the number of developers for third party apps are going to dwindle and there might not be many apps you can sideload onto your device anymore just because the third party developers have all given up on the Android platform.

I hope the trooncoders at Google all die from rotten stinkditches.
 
Maybe we'll get some open source android fork that works on many devices and is able to run gapps sandboxed or something
Please fill me with rainbows
 
Maybe we'll get some open source android fork that works on many devices and is able to run gapps sandboxed or something
Please fill me with rainbows
That's what Graphene OS is, from what I've read. An open source android fork that runs google play services sandboxed. It only officially supports Pixel phones now, but supposedly it can be installed on other stuff.

All i know is what I read on the FAQ though, haven't used it; gonna try it out in a couple weeks.
 
That's what Graphene OS is, from what I've read. An open source android fork that runs google play services sandboxed. It only officially supports Pixel phones now, but supposedly it can be installed on other stuff.

All i know is what I read on the FAQ though, haven't used it; gonna try it out in a couple weeks.
Too bad the developer is a total lolcow and not an entertaining or cool one but a mass reporting faggot
 
Too bad the developer is a total lolcow and not an entertaining or cool one but a mass reporting faggot
That's unfortunate but if my options are a decent OS that does what I want but might get discontinued due to slapfights from volatile autists and getting fucked in the ass by a trillion dollar corporation thirty seconds at a time every time I need to look up a tutorial on a car repair, I'm picking the autism every time.
 
That's what Graphene OS is, from what I've read. An open source android fork that runs google play services sandboxed. It only officially supports Pixel phones now, but supposedly it can be installed on other stuff.

All i know is what I read on the FAQ though, haven't used it; gonna try it out in a couple weeks.
I've been using it for over a year now without problems. Downloaded all my apps from Aurora and F-Droid, never even had to make a Google account.

Having to buy a Pixel for it sucks, but rumor has it the Graphene guys are talking about partnering directly with a different manufacturer. Will see if the glowies let it happen, assuming Graphene isn't backdoored already ofc.
 
Now when I get a new phone I'm going to have to do research and make sure it can be rooted first, thanks a lot fucking jeets
 
Screenshot_20250829-112637.webp


Reading googles statement


To make this process as streamlined as possible, we are building a new Android Developer Console just for developers who only distribute outside of Google Play, so they can easily complete their verification; get an early look at how it works. A note for student and hobbyist developers: we know your needs are different from commercial developers, so we’re creating a separate type of Android Developer Console account for you.

If you distribute apps on Google Play, you’ve likely already met these verification requirements through the existing Play Console process. You can find more information about how these requirements apply to you in our guides.

To be clear, developers will have the same freedom to distribute their apps directly to users through sideloading or to use any app store they prefer. We believe this is how an open system should work—by preserving choice while enhancing security for everyone. Android continues to show that with the right design and security principles, open and secure can go hand in hand. For more details on the specific requirements, visit our website. We'll share more information in the coming months.
 
Back
Top Bottom