Android – Live Laugh Love Do http://livelaughlovedo.com A Super Fun Site Mon, 29 Sep 2025 04:06:48 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9 Google’s new rules could wipe out sideloading and alternative app stores, F-Droid warns http://livelaughlovedo.com/googles-new-rules-could-wipe-out-sideloading-and-alternative-app-stores-f-droid-warns/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/googles-new-rules-could-wipe-out-sideloading-and-alternative-app-stores-f-droid-warns/#respond Mon, 29 Sep 2025 04:06:48 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/09/29/googles-new-rules-could-wipe-out-sideloading-and-alternative-app-stores-f-droid-warns/ [ad_1]

A photo of a Pixel 7 Pro with the restricted settings dialog showing

Mishaal Rahman / Android Authority

TL;DR

  • F-Droid has warned that Google’s new developer verification rules could effectively kill alternative Android app stores.
  • The platform says that Google’s rules are monopolistic and harmful to competition as well as user freedom.
  • F-Droid says the new rules would make Google the gatekeeper of all Android apps, but Google maintains that developers will still be able to distribute their apps directly to users through sideloading or use any app store.

If you’re an Android enthusiast, you’re probably very familiar with F-Droid, but for those who don’t know, it’s a fairly small but respected alternative to the Google Play Store. Unlike Google Play, F-Droid only hosts free and open-source apps and deploys checks to throw out any trackers, ads, and hidden data-collection tools in apps. The project has been around for 15 years and is a popular resource for privacy-conscious Android users. That said, it’s nowhere near as big as the Google Play Store and hosts a little over 3,000 apps compared to the millions of apps and billions of users on Google Play.

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In its blog post, the F-Droid team explained that Google’s new “developer registration decree” would require every Android app to be tied to a registered developer identity verified through government IDs and other personal details. Developers would also need to declare all of their app identifiers and signing keys directly to Google, making it the central authority for verifying Android apps, even those that are not on the Play Store.

So, if Google’s rule takes effect, alternative app stores like F-Droid will no longer be able to offer apps directly because they won’t control those keys or IDs.

The platform said it can’t take over app identities on behalf of open-source developers or force independent contributors to register with Google.

“The developer registration decree will end the F-Droid project and other free/open-source app distribution sources as we know them today,” F-Droid warned.

According to Google, developer verification will improve security and stop malware, but F-Droid disputes that claim. The group points out that the Play Store itself has repeatedly hosted malicious apps, while Android already has built-in protections like Play Protect that can remove harmful apps from devices. The platform argues that its open-source approach is more transparent and trustworthy than commercial stores like Google’s.

The bigger worry is that Google’s new policy could restrict how Android users get their apps and make Android a more closed ecosystem. “If you own a computer, you should have the right to run whatever programs you want on it,” F-Droid wrote.

The platform is now urging regulators in Europe, the US, and other regions to investigate Google’s plans, calling them monopolistic and harmful to competition and user freedom. Google plans to start rolling out its new developer verification requirements in phases starting September 2026. The company says developers will still be able to distribute their apps directly to users through sideloading or use any app store.

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I always install Chrome Beta on all my Android phones; here’s why http://livelaughlovedo.com/i-always-install-chrome-beta-on-all-my-android-phones-heres-why/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/i-always-install-chrome-beta-on-all-my-android-phones-heres-why/#respond Mon, 30 Jun 2025 12:46:45 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/06/30/i-always-install-chrome-beta-on-all-my-android-phones-heres-why/ [ad_1]

google chrome multiple accounts 4

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

It’s been more than 13 years since Chrome first launched on Android. Fundamentally, the app hasn’t changed much in all these years: I type a URL and the page loads up. In all these years, though, Chrome hasn’t caught up with the rest of Google’s apps in one key feature: multiple account support.

Most of the official Google apps let me quickly switch between different Google accounts, and they have done that for many years now, since 2010-2011, to be precise. Chrome, however, doesn’t allow that for some reason, and it’s the bane of my existence. To fix that, I always install Chrome Beta (and Chrome Dev) on my Android phones. Here’s why and how I make it work for me.

Do you use Chrome Beta, Dev, or Canary to create two separate browsing sessions or profiles?

2 votes

What Chrome Beta allows me to do that Chrome stable doesn’t

google chrome multiple accounts 3

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

I’m probably not the only person to have multiple Google accounts. Many people have at least two — personal and work/school — and potentially more for other purposes. For me, there’s a personal one, a work one for Android Authority, and a joint one with my husband, which we use for all the shared bills, reservations, documents, and purchases.

Since the beginning, I’ve established a clear separation between these three accounts. I don’t link them together inside the same Chrome profile on my desktop computer; instead, I use separate Chrome profiles that allow me to keep church and state private. That way, my work browsing doesn’t affect my personal recommendations, and my personal data doesn’t leak into work or my shared joint account.

Bookmarks, browsing history, cookies, caches, default addresses and payment methods, saved logins and passwords — all of these are separate between each account and profile because they do serve completely different purposes.

google chrome multiple accounts 5

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

On my Android phone, though, Chrome only allows me to log into one account and sync all that data over. If I want to switch to another account, I can’t simply swipe on my avatar and have it roll between personal, work, and joint. No, I have to sign out and then sign back in with the other account, do what I need, then remember to sign back out and into the first one again. I did that for all of one day back in 2012 and immediately regretted it. Then it occurred to me: There’s also Chrome Beta, can I sign in with a different account?

I use Chrome and Chrome beta to separate between my personal and my work accounts’ bookmarks, history, recommendations, logins, and other saved data.

And sure enough, I was able to keep my personal account linked to the main Chrome app on my phone, and then sign into my work account on Chrome Beta. I finally had a setup that was almost as good as what I had on my computer! I could keep my browsing and personal data separate and control what each profile sees and knows about me. Perfect.

The app does have “beta” in its name, and that should mean bugs, at least on paper. But in my 10+ years of using both browsers at the same time, I don’t even recall one instance where Chrome Beta failed me. I’m sure it’s not exactly as stable as the main release, and bugs occur, but what I’m trying to say is that it’s generally good enough to not be a “beta” experience in everyday life.

google chrome multiple accounts 2

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

The only hiccup is in handling links coming in from other apps. Say I’m checking a work email and I click a link, it’ll open in my default browser, which is Chrome stable, i.e., on my personal account. So I’ve learned to copy the link’s URL, manually open Chrome Beta, and paste it. It’s annoying, but not as annoying as sacrificing my privacy by keeping all my data in one browser.

In 2017, when I got married and created a joint account with my husband, I demoted my work account to Chrome’s less stable Chrome Dev since I was focusing on a better work-life balance and used my phone less for work. My new joint Google account with my husband became my mainstay Chrome Beta account. Dev has had a few bugs in all these years, but once again, nothing that I would call a dealbreaker. If you have even more Google accounts, you can go experimental and assign your least-used one to Chrome Canary. At this point, do expect some more frequent issues and bugs.

Unfortunately, the list of standalone Chrome apps stops there, so if you have five or more Google accounts, you won’t be able to log in with all of them. But four is a good start. Of course, it would be better if Google could add multiple profile support in Chrome so we don’t have to resort to these workarounds, and those with more than four accounts can still keep their browsing data separate. I had hope for that in 2012-2013, but in 2025, I think the hope has wilted and died.

You can always use the different Chrome apps to separate VPN from local browsing sessions, or have two Chrome instances with different permissions.

When I mentioned this multiple-Chrome trick in my article about the Google apps I always install on my Pixel, reader Darth Vader said that he uses this same trick for another purpose: to separate his VPN browsing from his regular local browsing using a VPN app that allows tunneling per application. I found this fascinating and an excellent way of using these separate Chrome apps to achieve different browsing needs, even under the same Google account. You could, for example, have one regular instance of Chrome and another in Beta, where you don’t allow the browser any permissions, disable third-party cookies, and pick different settings or flags. That sounds very useful, too.

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Google’s working on a mysterious new ‘App Cast’ tool for Android http://livelaughlovedo.com/googles-working-on-a-mysterious-new-app-cast-tool-for-android/ http://livelaughlovedo.com/googles-working-on-a-mysterious-new-app-cast-tool-for-android/#respond Thu, 19 Jun 2025 20:04:44 +0000 http://livelaughlovedo.com/2025/06/20/googles-working-on-a-mysterious-new-app-cast-tool-for-android/ [ad_1]

cast stock photo

Rita El Khoury / Android Authority

TL;DR

  • Google Play Services shows evidence of an in-development “App Cast” tool.
  • While its full functionality is unclear, it appears able to gather info about remote Android devices and access their installed apps.
  • One possibility could be the ability to remotely stream apps from one Android device to another.

Google’s always working on something new for Android, and we spend a fair amount of time digging through app and system updates in the hope of getting an early look at some of those developments. When we’re lucky, evidence is abundant and we’re able to easily infer what Google’s up to. Other times, however, it’s a bit harder to get the full picture of what Google might be working on — even when it seems clear that developers are definitely up to something. And today, we’re finding ourselves much more in the latter camp.

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An APK teardown helps predict features that may arrive on a service in the future based on work-in-progress code. However, it is possible that such predicted features may not make it to a public release.

We’re looking at a recent update to Google Play Services, and as you may know, this software is how Google implements a lot of system-level functionality in Android — like we looked at just last month when we spotted new device backup settings. This time we’ve been crawling through the 25.24.31 beta release, and have spotted evidence of a new “App Cast” feature.

We see references to App Cast popping up in code related to multi-device sync. We’ve also identified a number of text strings that appear to have been added in preparation of App Cast support:

Code

Starting app cast for package %s
Fetching app list from remote device.
Unable to get icon: %s not found
Starting cast session for ' ' from '
Launching '%s' on remote device '%s'

We haven’t been able to surface a UI for App Cast, and so we can’t see any of this in action, but one possibility could involve Google giving Android devices the ability to stream apps installed on other hardware linked to your account. We can tell that there are elements in place for choosing devices from a list, and showing a progress bar. And as mentioned in the strings above, we see code for pulling up a list of installed apps.

Admittedly, the need for an app streaming mode feels a little narrow — in a lot of cases, it seems easier to just install the app on multiple devices — but we can appreciate times that require access to data that lives on a specific phone or tablet. We also wonder if this casting might extend to bigger screens, letting you view Android apps from your phone on Google TV.

But as we said, right now we just don’t have enough of the puzzle to really say with any kind of certainty what Google is building here; this is all vibes at the moment. We’ve also spotted work in Play Services on some manner of new notification sync support that appears in proximity to some of this App Cast stuff, but we’re not sure if that’s just a coincidence, or if they’re really meant to be related.

That’s a little frustrating, but we’ll keep digging into future Play Services builds in the hopes that we can soon nail down Google’s intentions for App Cast.

Got a tip? Talk to us! Email our staff at [email protected]. You can stay anonymous or get credit for the info, it’s your choice.

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