- cross-posted to:
- android@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- android@lemmy.world
Personally, ever since I heard of this store, I’ve not been interested. It just seems like another Google Play to me.
I understand that the developers have done some things to enhance the security such as app certificate pinning and such, but I cannot get over the fact that it’s a single source that any government can contact and pull down an app from.
I personally stick with fdroid because if they are forced by governments to pull down an app the app dev can launch their own onion repo without asking permission.
And fdroid is working very diligently on reproducible builds. Which is unique in the app distribution landscape.
I understand the premise that you don’t want to trust a third party if you don’t have to. But I also don’t trust the developers to publish the source code correctly either. At least fdroid keeps everyone honest with the code being available.
I don’t think they’re aiming to replace F-Droid. Rather think of this as a tool to wean the masses off the play store. It’s also an alternative for those people currently using microg and Aurora Store.
Personally I have some proprietary apps that I don’t want to be without. If Accrescent could provide them, I could finally delete my google account. I literally just have an account to download apps.
You do not need a Google account to download apps. May I introduce you to the Aurora store. You can download it from fdroid and you can use an anonymous account to download apps with it.
Edit: I clearly did not read your comment closely enough. If you already have the Aurora store, then why do you need a Google account? I haven’t had one in like two years and didn’t use the one I had for years before that.
You can’t download paid apps through the Aurora store.
Guess it’s a good thing I’m a cheap motherfucker then. If an app has a price tag next to it, I don’t use it. Now if an app is open source and they ask me to donate to it, I’m willing to do that.
Why not both? ;)
Some FOSS apps are only available for a fee in the play store and I think that’s great. They’re able to access a bigger market for funding purposes, and we both know the vast majority of play store users won’t make the effort to figure out how to make donations otherwise.
I believe OSMAnd is in the Play Store, but costs money. But if you get it from fdroid, it’s free. And I’m okay with that, because I use fdroid.
Precisely, that’s what I meant. Different market segments need different approaches.
Tldr:
in order for Accrescent to continue advancing, we need $5,800/month in recurring donations to fund its full-time development.
We are currently receiving $112 each month in recurring donations.
We are currently spending $53.53/month on our services.
We recently discovered that an unprecedented Monero donation of ~$16,062.50 was received in the short time after we totaled the latest values for this article but before it was posted.
Because this is a significant donation, we will be posting an update on our social media accounts soon about what this means for the project
Update: They’ve released a roadmap.
They have a fixed plan for the next 3 months, mostly back-end improvements for app developers.
Longer term plans are listed in order of priority but without a time line, it depends on how much of their funding goal they reach.
Current funding on Github shown at 10% of goal.