Model Comparison
Model Editorial Structural Class Conf SETL Theme
@cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite +0.80 ND Strong positive 0.90 0.00 Open Source Advocacy
@cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite +0.80 ND Strong positive 0.90 0.00 Digital Rights
claude-haiku-4-5 lite +0.80 ND Strong positive 0.92 0.00 Digital Platform Freedom
claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 +0.35 +0.31 Neutral 0.28 0.08 Digital Freedom & Access
nvidia/nemotron-3-nano-30b-a3b:free ND ND
meta-llama/llama-3.3-70b-instruct:free ND ND
Section @cf/meta/llama-3.3-70b-instruct-fp8-fast lite @cf/meta/llama-4-scout-17b-16e-instruct lite claude-haiku-4-5 lite claude-haiku-4-5-20251001 nvidia/nemotron-3-nano-30b-a3b:free meta-llama/llama-3.3-70b-instruct:free
Preamble ND ND ND 0.36 ND ND
Article 1 ND ND ND 0.20 ND ND
Article 2 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 3 ND ND ND 0.00 ND ND
Article 4 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 5 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 6 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 7 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 8 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 9 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 10 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 11 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 12 ND ND ND 0.27 ND ND
Article 13 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 14 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 15 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 16 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 17 ND ND ND 0.10 ND ND
Article 18 ND ND ND 0.28 ND ND
Article 19 ND ND ND 0.80 ND ND
Article 20 ND ND ND 0.48 ND ND
Article 21 ND ND ND 0.38 ND ND
Article 22 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 23 ND ND ND 0.15 ND ND
Article 24 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 25 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 26 ND ND ND 0.35 ND ND
Article 27 ND ND ND 0.63 ND ND
Article 28 ND ND ND ND ND ND
Article 29 ND ND ND 0.33 ND ND
Article 30 ND ND ND 0.41 ND ND
+0.35 Keep Android Open (f-droid.org S:+0.32 )
2255 points by LorenDB 9 days ago | 736 comments on HN | Moderate positive Editorial · v3.7 · 2026-02-27 01:28:54 0
Summary Digital Freedom & Access Advocates
This F-Droid weekly newsletter reports on 287 app updates while simultaneously advocating for Android platform openness against Google's lock-down plans. The content champions digital freedom—particularly freedom of information access and expression—alongside community participation in technological development and resistance to corporate gatekeeping. The strongest alignment is with Articles 19-21 and 27, reflecting the post's focus on defending users' right to access diverse information and participate in technological culture.
Article Heatmap
Preamble: +0.36 — Preamble P Article 1: +0.20 — Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood 1 Article 2: ND — Non-Discrimination Article 2: No Data — Non-Discrimination 2 Article 3: 0.00 — Life, Liberty, Security 3 Article 4: ND — No Slavery Article 4: No Data — No Slavery 4 Article 5: ND — No Torture Article 5: No Data — No Torture 5 Article 6: ND — Legal Personhood Article 6: No Data — Legal Personhood 6 Article 7: ND — Equality Before Law Article 7: No Data — Equality Before Law 7 Article 8: ND — Right to Remedy Article 8: No Data — Right to Remedy 8 Article 9: ND — No Arbitrary Detention Article 9: No Data — No Arbitrary Detention 9 Article 10: ND — Fair Hearing Article 10: No Data — Fair Hearing 10 Article 11: ND — Presumption of Innocence Article 11: No Data — Presumption of Innocence 11 Article 12: +0.27 — Privacy 12 Article 13: ND — Freedom of Movement Article 13: No Data — Freedom of Movement 13 Article 14: ND — Asylum Article 14: No Data — Asylum 14 Article 15: ND — Nationality Article 15: No Data — Nationality 15 Article 16: ND — Marriage & Family Article 16: No Data — Marriage & Family 16 Article 17: +0.10 — Property 17 Article 18: +0.28 — Freedom of Thought 18 Article 19: +0.80 — Freedom of Expression 19 Article 20: +0.48 — Assembly & Association 20 Article 21: +0.38 — Political Participation 21 Article 22: ND — Social Security Article 22: No Data — Social Security 22 Article 23: +0.15 — Work & Equal Pay 23 Article 24: ND — Rest & Leisure Article 24: No Data — Rest & Leisure 24 Article 25: ND — Standard of Living Article 25: No Data — Standard of Living 25 Article 26: +0.35 — Education 26 Article 27: +0.63 — Cultural Participation 27 Article 28: ND — Social & International Order Article 28: No Data — Social & International Order 28 Article 29: +0.33 — Duties to Community 29 Article 30: +0.41 — No Destruction of Rights 30
Negative Neutral Positive No Data
Aggregates
Editorial Mean +0.35 Structural Mean +0.32
Weighted Mean +0.39 Unweighted Mean +0.34
Max +0.80 Article 19 Min 0.00 Article 3
Signal 14 No Data 17
Volatility 0.20 (Medium)
Negative 0 Channels E: 0.6 S: 0.4
SETL +0.08 Editorial-dominant
FW Ratio 61% 37 facts · 24 inferences
Evidence 29% coverage
4H 7M 3L 16 ND
Theme Radar
Foundation Security Legal Privacy & Movement Personal Expression Economic & Social Cultural Order & Duties Foundation: 0.28 (2 articles) Security: 0.00 (1 articles) Legal: 0.00 (0 articles) Privacy & Movement: 0.27 (1 articles) Personal: 0.19 (2 articles) Expression: 0.55 (3 articles) Economic & Social: 0.15 (1 articles) Cultural: 0.49 (2 articles) Order & Duties: 0.37 (2 articles)
HN Discussion 20 top-level · 30 replies
hparadiz 2026-02-20 18:12 UTC link
I would caution the decision makers on this. The line between a secure device and a useless toy is perforated and hard to see.
zb3 2026-02-20 18:12 UTC link
Android was never open. User apps are limited, only system apps can do X which means third party apps can't compete with Google and this is not a coincidence.

Let's focus on making it possible to use really open Linux systems on smartphones.

tadfisher 2026-02-20 18:14 UTC link
Just to put out what Google actually said in their blog post [0]:

> We appreciate the community's engagement and have heard the early feedback – specifically from students and hobbyists who need an accessible path to learn, and from power users who are more comfortable with security risks. We are making changes to address the needs of both groups.

> We heard from developers who were concerned about the barrier to entry when building apps intended only for a small group, like family or friends. We are using your input to shape a dedicated account type for students and hobbyists. This will allow you to distribute your creations to a limited number of devices without going through the full verification requirements.

> Based on this feedback and our ongoing conversations with the community, we are building a new advanced flow that allows experienced users to accept the risks of installing software that isn't verified. We are designing this flow specifically to resist coercion, ensuring that users aren't tricked into bypassing these safety checks while under pressure from a scammer. It will also include clear warnings to ensure users fully understand the risks involved, but ultimately, it puts the choice in their hands. We are gathering early feedback on the design of this feature now and will share more details in the coming months.

It is also true that they have not updated their developer documentation site and still assert that developer verification will be "required" in September 2026 [1]. Which might be true by some nonsensical definition of "required" if installing unverified apps requires an "advanced flow", but let's not give too much benefit of the doubt here.

0: https://android-developers.googleblog.com/2025/11/android-de...

1: https://developer.android.com/developer-verification

ruuda 2026-02-20 18:14 UTC link
I contacted the EU DMA team about my concerns and got a real reply within 24 hours. Not just an automated message, it looked like a real human read my message and wrote a reply. I'd urge other EU citizens to do the same.
notorandit 2026-02-20 18:16 UTC link
We ("you") have no power to keep android open. Unfortunately it is in the hands of a company that is building it for profit, in a way or the other.

It's been our choice to drink this glass of wishful thinking while giving that company a solid dominant position in the market.

We ("you") can only make choices that will overturn that trend.

Fully opensource hardware with fully opensource software? Maybe, but also this is wishful thinking.

nimbius 2026-02-20 18:37 UTC link
This isnt going to be a popular post because the HN crowd is very much a "China bad" crowd but I hypothesize China will likely step in and offer a fork that's compatible with open ecosystems not under the direct control of the us state department. This might be in the form of commits and investment in fdroid and pinephone, or a tiktok like alternative to the wests walled garden.

Edit: this will likely exist "uncensored" in other markets but conform to the PRCs standards and practices domestically, similarly to how tiktok operated prior to selling a version specifically taylored to US censorship and propaganda.

boberoni 2026-02-20 18:59 UTC link
The link is to the f-droid blog. The official "Keep Android Open" site is at https://keepandroidopen.org/, and contains good information on how you can contribute by contacting regulators.
fermigier 2026-02-20 19:02 UTC link
It is a disgrace how Google has managed this situation.

To recap the storyline, as far as I understand it: last August, Google announced plans to heavily restrict sideloading. Following community pushback, they promised an "advanced flow" for power users. The media widely reported this as a walk-back, leading users to assume the open ecosystem was safe.

But this promised feature hasn't appeared in any Android 16 or 17 betas. Google is quietly proceeding with the original lockdown.

The impact is a direct threat to independent AOSP distributions like Murena's e/OS/ (which I'm personally using). If installing a basic APK eventually requires a Google-verified developer ID, maintaining a truly de-Googled mobile OS becomes nearly impossible.

paxys 2026-02-20 19:08 UTC link
The fundamental problem is that we are relying on the good graces of Google to keep Android open, despite the fact that it often runs run contrary to their goals as a $4T for-profit behemoth. This may have worked in the past, but the "don't be evil" days are very far behind us.

I don't see a real future for Andrioid as an open platform unless the community comes together and does a hard fork. Google can continue to develop their version and go the Apple way (which, funny enough, no one has a problem with). Development of AOSP can be controlled by a software foundation, like tons of other successful projects.

WarmWash 2026-02-20 19:13 UTC link
The judge told Google that Apple is not anti-competitive because Apple has no competitors on it's platform (this all stemming from the Epic lawsuits).

Google listened.

Blame the judge for one of the worst legal calls in recent history. Google is a monopoly and Apple is not. Simple fix for Google...

fredgrott 2026-02-20 19:22 UTC link
What people forget is that the real monopoly is in how the AOSP hardware OEM contract is written....

Remember how hard Amazon had it to attempt an Android fork?

I was due to OEM SOC access being locked out due to those contracts....

Any open source mobile OS attempting to complete with AOSP needs access to mobile OEM soc providers not touched by AOSP contracts and currently that is somewhat hard.

martin-t 2026-02-20 21:56 UTC link
Crazy idea: when companies change their product, they have to change the name.

Do you ever feel like the same food item doesn't taste the same it did 10 years ago? Maybe it's your memory being faulty or maybe the company got new management which decided to cut costs while keeping prices, extract the differential value from customer inertia and move on when the product stops being profitable.

Android is the same. Certain freedoms were a part of the offering - a part of the brand name. They no longer are. Not only should lose their trademark[0], they should be legally forced to change the name.

[0]: The purpose of which is to identify genuine product from counterfeits - in this case, the counterfeit just happens to be by the same company which released the original product.

quentindanjou 2026-02-20 22:40 UTC link
I remember not long ago arguing that having Chromium become a monopoly was a bad thing, as it would mean Google could totally twist the web standard in something much more closed. I think this is a prime example.
flaburgan 2026-02-20 22:48 UTC link
Could anyone provide me some clarifications?

If I understood correctly, to "protect" users, Google wants to control what is installed on Android phones. I guess it means the Play store will be the only way to install an app, which in turn means: - That users won't be able to install what they want and that they would need a google account to install apps - That app developers have to go through google to distribute their apps, with identity verification etc. Obviously this is awful and would mean the end of F-droid and Aurora store etc. However, I'm also reading here and there that it is a threat to alternative ROMs. To me it sounds at the contrary as an amazing opportunity, as they can strip this verification and be the only truly open Android, or am I missing something? Why do people link this app verification thing with a possible closing of AOSP?

Also, Mozilla was already saying it 10years ago with Firefox OS but... The web is the platform. 90% of the apps out there could be websites. We have all technologies needed for this including offline with service workers. And it works on every damn platform, even the most obscure OS has a web browser. Don't want to be locked to an ecosystem? Just target the web!

0xbadcafebee 2026-02-21 01:06 UTC link
I want Google to lock down their platform. Hardcore locked down. So locked down you can't do anything with it at all. Because people need motivation to do something hard.

Android has been a bloated walled garden for years. It should have been like a PC w/Windows or Linux: anyone should be able to make an app (any way they want), publish it, let anyone who wants to download it & run it. But that was never the plan. The plan was to provide a moat to allow mobile telephone operators (& Google) to dictate what users were allowed to do with their phones. Imagine your ISP having total control over your desktop computer. Or killing a website, or program, because the ISP doesn't like it.

It is insane that we, the people giving them the money and agency to do this, that we've allowed this to be the status quo. We need to do something about it. We need to kill Android. And from the ashes, make a new platform that works for us, and not for a corporation's profits and anti-competition.

keeda 2026-02-21 01:50 UTC link
Periodic reminder (note, originaly posted in 2013): https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2018/07/googles-iron-grip-on...

At the risk of posting memes to HN: https://imgflip.com/i/akp488

budududuroiu 2026-02-21 03:40 UTC link
Maybe stupid question, we keep seeing "LLM figures out math problem humans couldn't, LLM finds security vulnerability by looking at hexdumps for 6 months straight. How hard or expensive would it be to let some LLMs loose on reverse engineering all the proprietary driver binary blobs?

People mentioning forking Android is hard, how easy do LLMs make this?

xvilka 2026-02-21 09:27 UTC link
A good opportunity to donate[1] to the GrapheneOS[2].

[1] https://grapheneos.org/donate

[2] https://grapheneos.org/

edg5000 2026-02-21 10:00 UTC link
I want Google as an app, not OS. Hear me out. Imagine an open device where you can run Google as just another sandboxed app. Inside, they can exert all the control they want. My bank and government can force me to use Google.

Then, at least I control my hardware and my OS.

It's just nasty to have your device and OS controlled by an antagonistic entity.

I see this in people why have used antagonistic software for decades and have become zombified and shellshocked; the idea that software could be on your side is to alien to them. They hate software and technology and just want to get some work done. They tolerate the abuse because they can't fight Google alone; it's pointless to resist.

linuxhansl 2026-02-21 20:19 UTC link
+1000

I donated a few $100's to the petition.

With 23,623 (as of today) signatures I doubt anybody really cares, and we'd all rather be cheeple doing the tech companies' bidding as long as we can flop on our couches and consume.

Clearly Google wants to make money off their monopoly (created in part from initial openness) and they are disguising it as some security/safety enhancement bullsh*t. Shameful!

My main question: I chose Android over Apple because of the extra freedoms it affords me. When that goes away, what reason do I have continuing with Android?

0x1ch 2026-02-20 18:14 UTC link
If I can't use banking or my NFC wallets on my phone, it has become 90% useless. The other 10% of usefulness is texting and calls, which every other phone can do.

Unfortunately, this mostly means using the closed android ecosystem.

gf000 2026-02-20 18:22 UTC link
There are some functionality limited to google play services, but it really is not too much in my opinion.
yjftsjthsd-h 2026-02-20 18:23 UTC link
> We heard from developers who were concerned about the barrier to entry when building apps intended only for a small group, like family or friends. We are using your input to shape a dedicated account type for students and hobbyists. This will allow you to distribute your creations to a limited number of devices without going through the full verification requirements.

In classic Google fashion, they hear the complaint, pretend that it's about something else, and give a half baked solution to that different problem that was not the actual issue. Any solution that disadvantages F-Droid compared to the less trustworthy Google Play is a problem.

colordrops 2026-02-20 18:29 UTC link
If they close things up with no alternative, the free open source software will likely start to catch up. it will take a few years though. This could be a blessing in disguise.
sigmoid10 2026-02-20 18:33 UTC link
It's also heavily influenced by businesses. Most employers will happily hand you an Apple or Android phone for work, but I don't think there is a single company out there that would dare to hand normal people an Ubuntu Touch based phone.
phoronixrly 2026-02-20 18:34 UTC link
We (people who live in a country/confederacy with working antitrust laws) have power to keep large companies from anticompetitive practices such as this one.
thewebguyd 2026-02-20 18:36 UTC link
> shape a dedicated account type for students and hobbyists.

Even that is a step too far in the wrong direction. Doesn't matter if it's free, or whatever, simply requiring an account at all to create and run software on your own device (or make it available to others) is wrong.

There exists no freedom when you are required to verify your identity, or even just provide any personal information whatsoever, to a company to run software on your device that you own.

mzajc 2026-02-20 18:40 UTC link
For posterity, what was their sentiment?
jerf 2026-02-20 18:46 UTC link
Not a chance. A fork that is under China's control, maybe, but not an "open" fork. They don't even pretend to have that as a value.

You may theoretically find it advantageous to use such a system anyhow. To a first-order approximation, the danger a government poses to you is proportional to its proximity to you. (In the interests of fairness, I will point out, so are the benefits a government may offer to you. In this case it just happens to be the dangers we are discussing.) Using the stack of a government based many thousands of miles/kilometers away from you may solve a problem for you, if you judge they are much less likely to use it against you than your local government.

But China certainly won't put out an "open" anything.

ge96 2026-02-20 18:49 UTC link
Pinephone is tragic, bought a bunch of Pine64's devices (PP, PPP, PB, PBuds, arm tablet, eInk tablet) but old tech, missing drivers, can't blame em no money no drivers... Still the community on Discord is great/helpful people.
microtonal 2026-02-20 19:11 UTC link
Great idea, I just did the same. I encourage other EU citizens to do the same. Keeping at least one of the two major mobile ecosystems open is important.

(And install GrapheneOS, the more successful open Android becomes, the better.)

aeve890 2026-02-20 19:12 UTC link
That'd be great but I'm not feeling like the Chinese market is too worried about open development. I got a Huawei Watch 5 as a gift and I liked it enough to try to develop my own apps (their app store is a wasteland) but to my surprise Harmony OS is not Android compatible (just Android based somehow). The watch's developer mode is useless. Trying to register a developer account is almost impossible and it seems they only allow chinese nationals and there's no plan to open registration. I couldn't even download their custom IDE (something like Android Studio) without an account.

Maybe it's just my experience.

microtonal 2026-02-20 19:14 UTC link
A hard fork is not needed. Non-Google Android do not have to enforce this requirement. It's more important to get as many people on alternatives like GrapheneOS as possible. And fund them by donating to them. If every ~0.5 million GrapheneOS users donated 10 Euro per month, they would be very well-funded.
realusername 2026-02-20 19:17 UTC link
The answer has to come from anti trust legislation. Android is too big for Google to control.
handity 2026-02-20 19:21 UTC link
A hard fork doesn't matter when the vast majority of phones have a locked bootloader.
microtonal 2026-02-20 19:24 UTC link
The impact is a direct threat to independent AOSP distributions like Murena's e/OS/ (which I'm personally using).

I don't think this is true, right? An AOSP build can just decide to still allow installing arbitrary APKs. Also see this post from the GrapheneOS team:

https://mastodon.social/@[email protected]/116103...

rzerowan 2026-02-20 19:48 UTC link
Maybe a shift to Huaweis HarmonyOS with its android compatibility layer or SailfishOS if they play their cards right.

As far as HarmonyOS i dont see many uptakes outside strict US free requirements as the other OEMs are lazy and also dont want to be locked into a competitor.

SailfishOS looks like its your time to faceplant once more , by not having a proper stratergy on monetizing on the many missteps from the current monopoly.I thonk at this point they need a leadership/biz stratergy overhaul - the tech is nice and polished, user demand is off the charts for an alternative . And they are just .. missing. Not even in th e conversation.

joecool1029 2026-02-20 19:53 UTC link
> China will likely step in and offer a fork that's compatible with open ecosystems not under the direct control of the us state department.

Where you been? They already had Huawei get kickbanned by Google and made their own OS (it's not more open): https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/HarmonyOS

arcanemachiner 2026-02-20 20:03 UTC link
If this finally pushes adoption of truly open Linux phones, then this will end up being a good thing, and the greatest favor that Google could do for the open source community.

Tragically, Linux phones have languished and are in an absolute state these days, but a lot of the building blocks are in place if user adoption occurs en masse. (Shout out to the lunatics who have kept this dream alive during these dark years.)

retired 2026-02-20 20:25 UTC link
Good thing restricting side-loading isn't legal in the European Union! Not a problem here. Apple had to enable side-loading on their EU-based phones and so will Google if they restrict it.
palata 2026-02-20 20:55 UTC link
What about the Android SDK? I don't think that this is open source, is it? As a developer, when you download an Android SDK you have accept a licence that is not open source, right?
apitman 2026-02-20 21:34 UTC link
Google's moat with Android is the same as it's moat with Chrome: complexity. There are very few entities that could fork Android.
slumberlust 2026-02-20 22:51 UTC link
90% of apps are just websites with a wrapper UI.
pino83 2026-02-20 23:11 UTC link
Good news: You (as a community) can now finally wake up from your dreams and get some things right!

It's really a shame that you always wait until you really get forced. Particularly in situations when every individual's inability has consequences for the others as well. I really gave up all ideas of a better world. With this community, the best you can hope is that the decay will be slow.

So everyone who would describe himself/herself as a FOSS enthusiast, or at least a friend of a somewhat open system where the user has some actual rights beyond sole consumption, put some pressure towards having actually de-Googled systems. A system that mostly comes from Google, would not fit my definition of that term at all! Even if they removed some parts of it. It's an euphemism. And it's dangerous because you constantly get trapped by these euphemisms. Ever. Single. F'ing. Time.

blueg3 2026-02-20 23:35 UTC link
There's a lot of misinformation here.

> I guess it means the Play store will be the only way to install an app

No, non-Play stores will still work, but developers will need to register a developer account with Google that is tied to some real identity. They already need to do this to distribute through the Play store, but now it'll apply regardless.

This is to make it harder for scam apps to churn app signatures. Kind of like requiring code-signing, but with only one CA.

> That users won't be able to install what they want

No, sideloading will still work, but it won't work if the APK isn't signed by someone in the Google developer registry.

> and that they would need a google account to install apps

Nope.

> That app developers have to go through google to distribute their apps, with identity verification etc.

They don't need to distribute through Google, but they will need to be involved with Google and do identity verification.

> However, I'm also reading here and there that it is a threat to alternative ROMs. To me it sounds at the contrary as an amazing opportunity, as they can strip this verification and be the only truly open Android, or am I missing something?

You're being misinformed. They won't even need to strip the verification. The verification is only for certified Android -- OEMs that partner with Google. Custom ROMs and the OEMs that aren't certified (Amazon, some Chinese manufacturers) won't have verification.

The target audience for verification and who would ever use a custom ROM has basically zero overlap.

spystath 2026-02-20 23:49 UTC link
There is an implicit shame in disgrace but faceless entities have no shame. They'll just put out another press release written in corporate newspeak by an LLM and move on withe the plans anyway. This is standard Google behaviour. They do it with Chrome, they do it with Android, they'll keep doing it with all their captive markets. I fear that in practice even having an "advanced flow" will make little difference as some applications will refuse to work if you have it enabled anyway (in the same vein if debugging is enabled, for example).

Nothing about Android is open except the absolutely minimum amount of linux kernel that's required to boot the thing. Then it's blobs and restrictions all the way to the screen.

themafia 2026-02-21 01:35 UTC link
The line between a phone and a computer is what has been perforated. What I need is a modem. I don't need the modem baked into a computer that has a permanently affixed screen and battery. That then pretends to be some kind of secure enclave for my deepest secrets.

"Security."

As if I'm in the government or something. Why can't the people who need military level security get their own platform? Shouldn't they just have that already?

bigyabai 2026-02-21 04:07 UTC link
> Imagine your ISP having total control over your desktop computer. Or killing a website, or program, because the ISP doesn't like it.

It's not very hard to imagine? Most people don't expect that level of control anymore; their desktop just updates with whatever corporate slopware is pushed out seasonally. Websites come-and-go. It's not a hugely motivating rally-cry for average person.

> We need to kill Android. And from the ashes, make a new platform that works for us, and not for a corporation's profits and anti-competition.

Android is the best-working part of that equation. Microsoft supported Android apps on Windows Phone. Jolla supports Android apps on Sailfish OS. Linux supports Android apps in Waydroid. You don't have to "kill" Android as a runtime or smartphone OS; just force Google to compete with 3rd party ROMs.

madeofpalk 2026-02-21 08:11 UTC link
Google lost because they have all the emails colluding to prevent competition.

If Google had not done that, they wouldn't have lost.

fsflover 2026-02-21 08:51 UTC link
> Fully opensource hardware with fully opensource software? Maybe, but also this is wishful thinking.

My smartphone runs an FSF-endorsed OS, PureOS. This is reality. It's not open hardware, but it's a long way from Android in the right direction. You can also get a Precursor, which is open hardware.

Editorial Channel
What the content says
+0.80
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.80
SETL
0.00

This article is CENTRAL to page messaging. Post advocates strongly against Android lock-down that would restrict app distribution and information access. 'Keep Android Open' campaign directly defends freedom to seek, receive, and impart information. Post also critiques uncritical media repetition of corporate messaging, championing information freedom.

+0.65
Article 27 Cultural Participation
High Framing
Editorial
+0.65
SETL
+0.18

This article is HIGHLY RELEVANT. Post celebrates 287 updated applications as shared scientific and cultural contributions. Emphasizes community participation in technological innovation and advancement.

+0.50
Article 20 Assembly & Association
Medium Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.50
SETL
+0.16

Post celebrates voluntary community participation in app development. Invites readers to 'join the TWIF forum thread,' emphasizing collective responsibility and shared mission.

+0.45
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights
High Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.45
SETL
+0.21

F-Droid's entire advocacy against Android lock-down directly supports Article 30's principle of preventing activities that would destroy previously established human rights. 'Keep Android Open' campaign explicitly opposes corporate control that would restrict freedoms.

+0.40
Preamble Preamble
High Advocacy Framing
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.20

Content explicitly advocates for keeping Android open against corporate lock-down, framing technological freedom as foundational to human rights. Defends individuals' agency in choosing their own tools.

+0.40
Article 21 Political Participation
Medium Advocacy
Editorial
+0.40
SETL
+0.14

Post explicitly instructs readers to engage in democratic participation: 'voice their concerns to whatever local authority is able to understand the dangers' of Android lock-down.

+0.35
Article 26 Education
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.35
SETL
0.00

F-Droid explicitly supports education and learning through free access to open-source software, detailed documentation, and accessible development insights.

+0.35
Article 29 Duties to Community
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.35
SETL
+0.13

Post emphasizes duties to community through participation requests, collective responsibility for defending platform openness, and mutual contribution to shared mission.

+0.30
Article 18 Freedom of Thought
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.30
SETL
+0.12

F-Droid's explicit openness and diversity of apps supports freedom of thought and conscience by enabling access to diverse ideological, religious, and philosophical tools.

+0.25
Article 12 Privacy
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.25
SETL
-0.12

Content celebrates distribution of privacy-respecting applications (ProtonVPN, encrypted messaging, privacy tools), framing privacy protection as core value.

+0.20
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium Framing
Editorial
+0.20
SETL
0.00

Content implicitly supports universal equality by treating all users and developers as equal participants in technological access, opposing tiered or gatekeeping models.

+0.15
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.15
SETL
0.00

Post recognizes app developers' work in creating and updating 287 applications, acknowledging their contribution and labor.

+0.10
Article 17 Property
Low Framing
Editorial
+0.10
SETL
0.00

Post's emphasis on FLOSS and open-source development relates to alternative models of intellectual property and shared ownership rather than proprietary control.

0.00
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Editorial
0.00
SETL
ND

No direct engagement with right to life, liberty, or security of person.

ND
Article 2 Non-Discrimination
Low Framing

No explicit discussion of discrimination based on protected characteristics.

ND
Article 4 No Slavery

No content related to slavery or servitude.

ND
Article 5 No Torture

No content related to torture or cruel, inhuman treatment.

ND
Article 6 Legal Personhood

No content related to recognition as person before law.

ND
Article 7 Equality Before Law

No content related to equal protection before law.

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

No content related to effective remedy for rights violations.

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

No content related to arbitrary arrest or detention.

ND
Article 10 Fair Hearing

No content related to fair and public hearing before court.

ND
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

No content related to criminal procedure or presumption of innocence.

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

No content related to freedom of movement.

ND
Article 14 Asylum

No content related to asylum or refuge.

ND
Article 15 Nationality

No content related to nationality.

ND
Article 16 Marriage & Family

No content related to marriage or family.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

No content related to social security or social services.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

No content related to right to rest and leisure.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

No content related to adequate standard of living or health.

ND
Article 28 Social & International Order

No content related to social and international order for human rights realization.

Structural Channel
What the site does
Element Modifier Affects Note
Legal & Terms
Privacy
No observable site-wide privacy policy or banner on this article page.
Terms of Service
No observable terms of service linked from this article page.
Identity & Mission
Mission
No explicit mission statement for the F-Droid organization on this article page.
Editorial Code
No observable editorial code, standards, or corrections policy on this article page.
Ownership
No observable ownership information on this article page.
Access & Distribution
Access Model
Content is freely accessible with no paywalls or login requirements.
Ad/Tracking
No observable ads or third-party trackers on this article page.
Accessibility
No observable accessibility features or statements on this article page.
+0.80
Article 19 Freedom of Expression
High Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.80
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

F-Droid's entire purpose is enabling freedom of information expression through uncensored app distribution. Architecture actively resists corporate gatekeeping and information control.

+0.60
Article 27 Cultural Participation
High Framing
Structural
+0.60
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.18

F-Droid's infrastructure enables all users to participate in and benefit from scientific and cultural advancement through access to diverse innovative software.

+0.45
Article 20 Assembly & Association
Medium Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.45
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.16

F-Droid structure enables peaceful assembly through community forums, public GitLab repositories, issue tracking, and contributor governance.

+0.35
Article 21 Political Participation
Medium Advocacy
Structural
+0.35
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.14

F-Droid structure enables democratic participation in technology governance through community deliberation and contributor decision-making.

+0.35
Article 26 Education
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.35
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

Site provides translations in 30+ languages and links to detailed technical documentation, enabling global educational access.

+0.35
Article 30 No Destruction of Rights
High Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.35
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.21

F-Droid's open-source model and active resistance to proprietary lock-in prevent restriction of users' established digital rights.

+0.30
Preamble Preamble
High Advocacy Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.20

F-Droid's open-source infrastructure and community governance embody Preamble values of freedom and equal participation without corporate gatekeeping.

+0.30
Article 12 Privacy
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
-0.12

F-Droid's non-commercial, ad-free infrastructure avoids surveillance tracking; curates privacy-focused apps; operates without invasive data collection.

+0.30
Article 29 Duties to Community
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.30
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.13

F-Droid's community structure creates obligations and opportunities for shared stewardship of the platform.

+0.25
Article 18 Freedom of Thought
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.25
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
+0.12

Repository's neutral curation policy allows diverse apps without censoring based on ideology, belief, or conscience.

+0.20
Article 1 Freedom, Equality, Brotherhood
Medium Framing
Structural
+0.20
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

F-Droid's universal, non-discriminatory app distribution without geographic, economic, or status-based barriers upholds equality principle.

+0.15
Article 23 Work & Equal Pay
Low Framing
Structural
+0.15
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

F-Droid provides infrastructure enabling developer work and contribution, though primarily through voluntary participation.

+0.10
Article 17 Property
Low Framing
Structural
+0.10
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
0.00

F-Droid's GPL-based software and open licensing enable users to possess, modify, and control software on their devices.

0.00
Article 3 Life, Liberty, Security
Structural
0.00
Context Modifier
ND
SETL
ND

Not addressed in observable structural features on this page.

ND
Article 2 Non-Discrimination
Low Framing

Platform structure does not discriminate in access based on observable characteristics.

ND
Article 4 No Slavery

Not applicable.

ND
Article 5 No Torture

Not applicable.

ND
Article 6 Legal Personhood

Not applicable.

ND
Article 7 Equality Before Law

Not applicable.

ND
Article 8 Right to Remedy

Not applicable.

ND
Article 9 No Arbitrary Detention

Not applicable.

ND
Article 10 Fair Hearing

Not applicable.

ND
Article 11 Presumption of Innocence

Not applicable.

ND
Article 13 Freedom of Movement

Not applicable.

ND
Article 14 Asylum

Not applicable.

ND
Article 15 Nationality

Not applicable.

ND
Article 16 Marriage & Family

Not applicable.

ND
Article 22 Social Security

Not applicable.

ND
Article 24 Rest & Leisure

Not applicable.

ND
Article 25 Standard of Living

Not applicable.

ND
Article 28 Social & International Order

Not applicable.

Supplementary Signals
How this content communicates, beyond directional lean. Learn more
Epistemic Quality
How well-sourced and evidence-based is this content?
0.62 medium claims
Sources
0.7
Evidence
0.6
Uncertainty
0.6
Purpose
0.8
Propaganda Flags
3 manipulative rhetoric techniques found
3 techniques detected
appeal to fear
'Running out of time until Google becomes the gate-keeper of all users devices' and urgent banner warning create time-pressure framing around lock-down threat.
loaded language
Phrases like 'we were baffled,' 'battle of PR campaigns,' 'we are not alone in our fight' use emotionally charged language to characterize Android situation.
causal oversimplification
Android lock-down threat presented in relatively simplified terms without extensive technical nuance about implementation pathways or intermediate steps.
Emotional Tone
Emotional character: positive/negative, intensity, authority
urgent
Valence
+0.3
Arousal
0.7
Dominance
0.5
Transparency
Does the content identify its author and disclose interests?
0.67
✓ Author ✓ Conflicts ✗ Funding
More signals: context, framing & audience
Solution Orientation
Does this content offer solutions or only describe problems?
0.68 mixed
Reader Agency
0.7
Stakeholder Voice
Whose perspectives are represented in this content?
0.58 5 perspectives
Speaks: institutionindividuals
About: corporationindividuals
Temporal Framing
Is this content looking backward, at the present, or forward?
mixed short term
Geographic Scope
What geographic area does this content cover?
global
Europe
Complexity
How accessible is this content to a general audience?
moderate medium jargon domain specific
Longitudinal · 4 evals
+1 0 −1 HN
Audit Trail 24 entries
2026-02-28 01:34 dlq_replay DLQ message 97552 replayed to EVAL_QUEUE: Keep Android Open - -
2026-02-28 01:34 dlq_replay DLQ message 97546 replayed to EVAL_QUEUE: Keep Android Open - -
2026-02-28 01:34 dlq_replay DLQ message 97541 replayed to EVAL_QUEUE: Keep Android Open - -
2026-02-28 00:28 eval_success Light evaluated: Strong positive (0.80) - -
2026-02-28 00:28 eval Evaluated by llama-3.3-70b-wai: +0.80 (Strong positive)
2026-02-27 21:37 eval_success Light evaluated: Strong positive (0.80) - -
2026-02-27 21:37 eval Evaluated by llama-4-scout-wai: +0.80 (Strong positive)
2026-02-27 21:33 rater_validation_fail Light parse failure for model llama-4-scout-wai: SyntaxError: Unexpected token '+', ..."itorial": +0.8, "... is not valid JSON - -
2026-02-27 17:02 rater_validation_fail Light parse failure for model llama-4-scout-wai: SyntaxError: Unexpected token '+', ..."itorial": +0.8, "... is not valid JSON - -
2026-02-27 16:47 rater_validation_fail Light parse failure for model llama-4-scout-wai: SyntaxError: Unexpected token '+', ..."itorial": +0.8, "... is not valid JSON - -
2026-02-27 16:33 rater_validation_fail Light parse failure for model llama-4-scout-wai: SyntaxError: Unexpected token '+', ..."itorial": +0.8, "... is not valid JSON - -
2026-02-27 01:45 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Keep Android Open - -
2026-02-27 01:43 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 01:42 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 01:41 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 01:38 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Keep Android Open - -
2026-02-27 01:37 eval_retry OpenRouter error 400 model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 01:37 eval_failure Evaluation failed: Error: OpenRouter API error 400: {"error":{"message":"Provider returned error","code":400,"metadata":{"raw":"{\"details\":{\"_errors\":[\"response_format is not supported by this model\"]},\"issues\": - -
2026-02-27 01:37 eval_failure Evaluation failed: Error: OpenRouter API error 400: {"error":{"message":"Provider returned error","code":400,"metadata":{"raw":"{\"details\":{\"_errors\":[\"response_format is not supported by this model\"]},\"issues\": - -
2026-02-27 01:37 eval_retry OpenRouter error 400 model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 01:36 rate_limit OpenRouter rate limited (429) model=llama-3.3-70b - -
2026-02-27 01:33 dlq Dead-lettered after 1 attempts: Keep Android Open - -
2026-02-27 01:29 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5: +0.80 (Strong positive) +0.02
2026-02-27 01:28 eval Evaluated by claude-haiku-4-5: +0.78 (Strong positive)