Comment on Google Play Store listing apps installed from F-Droid that it cannot update
Norgur@fedia.io 7 months agoI think you massively overestimate the amount of users that are
a) affected by this
b) reporting it
When seeing the overall picture, this might mlbe a rather fringe issue in Google's eyes.
Furthermore, you might be exaggerating the impact as well. The "impact" is that an app update fails. That's it. That might be annoying, but isn't the grave and evil thing you make it out to be.
Besides, have you ever thought about that this stems from a rather bad practice on F-Droid/app developer side? They use the same package name for a software with a different signature. That's just not ideal to begin with. All packages with the same name should have the same signature for any given version of the package. That's how security works. If they don't follow that, how is a user/security software supposed to check if the signature is authentic or of the package was tampered with?
NeatNit@discuss.tchncs.de 7 months ago
AFAIK F-Droid allows using the same signing key as in PS. The choice is up to the developer. But as I said, if they use the same key then PS will overwrite the app, which is 100% unwanted behaviour.
What do you suggest about package names? So you think there should be
org.wikipedia.playstore
,org.wikipedia.fdroid
,org.wikipedia.galaxystore
to use a different package name per store? Or should just F-Droid get the special name?Do you think it’s okay when e.g. play store and galaxy store update apps installed by the other store? This happens with various apps, especially some Samsung and Microsoft apps. (Obviously only when using the same keys)
And specifically do you think that’s okay when F-Droid is thrown into the mix? I think absolutely not, especially since F-Droid often removes proprietary libraries, ads and tracking that are present in the other sources.
Honestly I can warm up to the idea that F-Droid builds should have a unique package name (call it a flavour, even if it’s 1:1 with the play store release). But the Play Store and Galaxy Store overwriting each others’ apps already reeks of idiocy to me, and F-Droid has nothing to do with it.