• @danhab99@programming.dev
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    12 days ago

    What do they mean “help”? Does this mean that they’re going to have to suffer with the consequences of paying devs?

  • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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    454 days ago

    Misleading headline. Instead of public repos, they’ll use source snapshots of each release. It’s technically correct because the development is going private, but the releases will remain open source.

    • @Onomatopoeia@lemmy.cafe
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      4 days ago

      If I understand you correctly, the developmental changes occurring between releases (every little step change/test) won’t be visible to us, just the final results in the form of the release code? (All corrections/clarifications accepted, hell, requested). We’d still be able to compile, but we wouldn’t necessarily have code for those small, incremental changes.

      • Martin
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        164 days ago

        It’s always been like this for most repositories that make up Android. The few projects that were truly developed in the open, such as ART, will now follow the same private branches as the rest of Android.

      • @catloaf@lemm.ee
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        84 days ago

        Correct. We will, of course, be able to create diffs between the released versions, for the whole project or for individual files (assuming they haven’t moved around).

    • JustEnoughDucks
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      3 days ago

      Isn’t that sources available, not open source since they aren’t allowing community contributions, or am I misunderstanding that?

      Kind of like how greyjay is source available but not open source?

    • Virkkunen
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      94 days ago

      Because effectively nothing is changing. Android is still open source, OEMs still have access to the internal branches for early development, custom ROMs will still have to wait until the new version is released to source entirely.

      There are many other apps, like Signal, that have the same development approach but no one complained about it. It’s just a lot of misinformation due to misunderstandings with these headlines.

    • @0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      84 days ago

      Apparently, there’s a lot of people going around, anytime this comes up saying this is nothing new. There’s nothing new to the end users, who never cared. But this is going to make it hard for tinkerers to figure out shady shit Google is trying to pull.

      GrapheneOS came out saying that they’ll not be affected because they’re planning to get OEM partners with access to internal branch. They’ve also mentioned they stopped reporting vulnerabilities to Google. Google doesn’t want being bothered with fixing vulnerabilities. So there’s that too

      might be a concentrated PR attempt to downplay the change. idk

  • @limerod@reddthat.comM
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    44 days ago

    Google has shared more details on how AOSP will change after it makes Android OS development fully private

    TL;DR

    • Google has confirmed to Android Authority that the Android team will still review code contributions from external developers.
    • The company also shared details on what branch of Android platform developers should work with from now on, as well as what will happen to other AOSP-adjacent projects.
    • The details shed light on what exactly will change after Google takes development of the Android OS fully private.