• @aluminium
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    205 months ago

    As a hobbist App developer I can tell its probably at least to some extent due to the ongoing “cost” to keep the Apps hosted and working.

    Every year when a new Android beta comes out you have to go through your App, check if everything still works only to then discover something broke and now you gotta figure out how to fix it.

    With a small App I hosted starting at Android 10 every major update so far caused me some trouble. Now with Android 14 this is the last version I’ll support for the simple fact that I don’t have the time to keep up with it.

    And mind you this was a rather simple small App, I can’t imagine what a headache it is to maintain a game.

    • @[email protected]
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      185 months ago

      Sure, you don’t have to support it with updates indefinitely, but I think the possibility should exist to delist it so new people can’t buy it but people who bought it before would still be able to download it (with no guarantee it will work).

    • @foggy
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      45 months ago

      You say that like businesses in eras past haven’t had any overhead.

      Overhead is a part of the profit equation. If you can’t make it work, you’re not profitable, and you lose.

      • Curious Canid
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        95 months ago

        It isn’t just about businesses. There used to be a lot more free apps on the Play Store, but keeping up with constantly-changing requirements makes that impractical. You can’t just put something up and leave it. You have to work on frequently or it gets dropped. You also have to keep up with their demands to limit certain features and to provide new information or it gets dropped.

        I used to have a handful of free apps up on Play. Now they are all gone because I just don’t have the time to rewrite them every few months.

      • @[email protected]
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        15 months ago

        It doesn’t help when the overhead is dictated by a massive corporation that isn’t your friend…

    • @[email protected]
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      45 months ago

      You’re talking about a different situation though. I have old apps that are no longer supported so I can’t install them on newer devices. However, I can still install them on old devices with a supported OS version (or trick the Play Store into installing on a new OS and deal with bugs).

    • @[email protected]
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      35 months ago

      What about this: Can we stop pushing for big OS updates every year? This just makes it harder on developers, and the apps are the reason people use the OS in the first place.

    • Cyber Yuki
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      15 months ago

      For Google, hosting an app is just a matter of keeping an entry in a database and its data in storage. It’s not about the difficulty.

      Furthermore, that app COST MONEY to the user. Here Google is not only removing the app from the store, they’re also UNINSTALLING it from the user’s device, without warning them, and without compensating them financially for this.

      To make things even worse, their malware detection algorithm is prone to false positives. There’s not even a degree of certainty, like “there’s a 20% chance we could be making a mistake.” A binary without tolerance means they are removing things only on the SUSPICION they could be malware.

      I had a very useful open source app - that I installed WITHOUT Google play store - removed from my phone. It was never submitted to Google and neither the author nor I EVER agreed to their app store remove third party software from my phone.

      Google have become control freaks over our phones. The only solution I see is to install a third party OS, like Lineage or Graphene. I might even have to buy a new phone for this, but I don’t care. I don’t want Google to assume the role of Nanny and take away control of MY devices that I bought with my own fucking money.