This is the first step in moving to fully closed source.
Agreed. At the very least to a point where Android isn’t usable by anyone else.
I guess degooled versions are getting too popular thus a threat to google’s business.
Lol that I doubt.
Comment on Google will develop the Android OS fully in private, and here's why
FrostyPolicy@suppo.fi 6 days ago
This is the first step in moving to fully closed source. I guess degooled versions are getting too popular thus a threat to google’s business.
This is the first step in moving to fully closed source.
Agreed. At the very least to a point where Android isn’t usable by anyone else.
I guess degooled versions are getting too popular thus a threat to google’s business.
Lol that I doubt.
They can’t close the source code as long as they use the Linux kernel, right? Besides, Android is popular among other companies because they can customize part of it as they see fit.
This change isn’t really that drastic, because Android never really followed the open source way of doing things. The article even explains that this won’t change much even for ROM developers, since they’re not creating releases based on “work in progress” branches.
Really the only difference is that Google will spare the work of merging two separate branches often and solving conflicts that might as well be turning into a nightmare as the code base has grown.
They can’t close the kernel. They already distribute Android with proprietary software - for example Google Play services and DRM services.
Quite true. Linux and all modules loaded into it are GPL licensed. The userland and tooling on the other hand can be licensed however. They are free to close source on anything except kernel code.
Google will continue to publish the source code for Android’s Linux kernel fork, as it is licensed under GPLv2, which mandates source code releases, and is separate from AOSP.
This is about AOSP, which apparently is separate and uses the MIT licence.
I can’t see it making a huge difference, Android has always been in that “OSS but not FOSS” area of basically being completely owned and controlled by Google.
Android is Android/Linux, not GNU/Linux.
The Linux kernel is compatible with a closed source userland, what makes GNU/Linux attract the userland towards open source, is GNU’s glibc, other libc alternatives don’t have that effect.
I would be surprised if that was the cause.
sabreW4K3@lazysoci.al 6 days ago
What? The ROM market share is nowhere near what it once was in terms of percentage or raw numbers.
N0x0n@lemmy.ml 6 days ago
True ! But there is a resurgence of ROMs. Squeezing any precent as low as possible is their goal, killing open-source/alternatives as much as they can !
I really hope hardware/software alternatives in the phone market get some funds to get away from the big tech monopoly.
megopie@beehaw.org 6 days ago
when average users start fleeing en mass, it’s already to late, and arguably it’s approaching a critical mass where there is enough common knowledge and “friends who use that” to make the jump easier. Right now, the average user doesn’t have much of a reason to jump, but if Google has to restructure their business model due to their ad monopoly getting crowbarred, they might implement stuff that would be enough to get average users to start jumping.