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posted by hubie on Thursday November 06, @09:42AM   Printer-friendly
from the software-walls-do-a-prison-make dept.

https://hackaday.com/2025/10/22/what-happened-to-running-what-you-wanted-on-your-own-machine/
https://archive.ph/6i4vr

When the microcomputer first landed in homes some forty years ago, it came with a simple freedom—you could run whatever software you could get your hands on. Floppy disk from a friend? Pop it in. Shareware demo downloaded from a BBS? Go ahead! Dodgy code you wrote yourself at 2 AM? Absolutely. The computer you bought was yours. It would run whatever you told it to run, and ask no questions.

Today, that freedom is dying. What's worse, is it's happening so gradually that most people haven't noticed we're already halfway into the coffin.

The latest broadside fired in the war against platform freedom has been fired. Google recently announced new upcoming restrictions on APK installations. Starting in 2026, Google will tightening the screws on sideloading, making it increasingly difficult to install applications that haven't been blessed by the Play Store's approval process. It's being sold as a security measure, but it will make it far more difficult for users to run apps outside the official ecosystem. There is a security argument to be made, of course, because suspect code can cause all kinds of havoc on a device loaded with a user's personal data. At the same time, security concerns have a funny way of aligning perfectly with ulterior corporate motives.

[...] The walled garden concept didn't start with smartphones. Indeed, video game consoles were a bit of a trailblazer in this space, with manufacturers taking this approach decades ago. The moment gaming became genuinely profitable, console manufacturers realized they could control their entire ecosystem. Proprietary formats, region systems, and lockout chips were all valid ways to ensure companies could levy hefty licensing fees from developers. They locked down their hardware tighter than a bank vault, and they did it for one simple reason—money. As long as the manufacturer could ensure the console wouldn't run unapproved games, developers would have to give them a kickback for every unit sold.

[...] Then came the iPhone, and with it, the App Store. Apple took the locked-down model and applied it to a computer you carry in your pocket. The promise was that you'd only get apps that were approved by Apple, with the implicit guarantee of a certain level of quality and functionality.

[...] Apple sold the walled garden as a feature. It wasn't ashamed or hiding the fact—it was proud of it. It promised apps with no viruses and no risks; a place where everything was curated and safe. The iPhone's locked-down nature wasn't a restriction; it was a selling point.

But it also meant Apple controlled everything. Every app paid Apple's tax, and every update needed Apple's permission. You couldn't run software Apple didn't approve, full stop. You might have paid for the device in your pocket, but you had no right to run what you wanted on it. Someone in Cupertino had the final say over that, not you.

When Android arrived on the scene, it offered the complete opposite concept to Apple's control. It was open source, and based on Linux. You could load your own apps, install your own ROMs and even get root access to your device if you wanted. For a certain kind of user, that was appealing. Android would still offer an application catalogue of its own, curated by Google, but there was nothing stopping you just downloading other apps off the web, or running your own code.

Sadly, over the years, Android has been steadily walking back that openness. The justifications are always reasonable on their face. Security updates need to be mandatory because users are terrible at remembering to update. Sideloading apps need to come with warnings because users will absolutely install malware if you let them just click a button. Root access is too dangerous because it puts the security of the whole system and other apps at risk. But inch by inch, it gets harder to run what you want on the device you paid for.

[...] Microsoft hasn't pulled the trigger on fully locking down Windows. It's flirted with the idea, but has seen little success. Windows RT and Windows 10 S were both locked to only run software signed by Microsoft—each found few takers. Desktop Windows remains stubbornly open, capable of running whatever executable you throw at it, even if it throws up a few more dialog boxes and question marks with every installer you run these days.

[...] Here's what bothers me most: we're losing the idea that you can just try things with computers. That you can experiment. That you can learn by doing. That you can take a risk on some weird little program someone made in their spare time. All that goes away with the walled garden. Your neighbour can't just whip up some fun gadget and share it with you without signing up for an SDK and paying developer fees. Your obscure game community can't just write mods and share content because everything's locked down. So much creativity gets squashed before it even hits the drawing board because it's just not feasible to do it.

It's hard to know how to fight this battle. So much ground has been lost already, and big companies are reluctant to listen to the esoteric wishers of the hackers and makers that actually care about the freedom to squirt whatever through their own CPUs. Ultimately, though, you can still vote with your wallet. Don't let Personal Computing become Consumer Computing, where you're only allowed to run code that paid the corporate toll. Make sure the computers you're paying for are doing what you want, not just what the executives approved of for their own gain. It's your computer, it should run what you want it to!


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  • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 06, @02:16PM (1 child)

    by Anonymous Coward on Thursday November 06, @02:16PM (#1423481)

    The enshitification is truly real. Things we didn't imagine even 5-10 years ago are now being done unopposed. Update your windows, use a microsoft account. Chat control, device based age verification. Flock cameras. Upload your ID and scan your face to continue signing up.

    In this kind of world, do you still expect to manage your own device? Maybe through sheer grit will you be able to take back some privacy but most normies have long checked out.

    Mention privacy or autonomy and their eyes glaze over. But my keeeds.. muh misinformation, the "bad guys". List just goes on and on. Soon you won't even have an internet anymore, let alone private devices.

    This development is the turning of the screws further and a few people are noticing but still missing the big picture. All of these countries didn't suddenly start implementing digital ID all at once for no reason. The internet and these devices have become ingrained so within our lives that withholding them is now a good stick for the surveillance carrot.

    Maybe you will argue that you can escape it but your kids won't. It will be the norm for them.

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  • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 07, @12:08AM

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 07, @12:08AM (#1423530)

    I see this as the "Beast" referred to in the Biblical Book of Revelation.

    2000 Years ago.

    We have not seen the Apocalypse yet, but it's sure shaping up to be a doozy.

    There are still a few things that will have to pass first...the most visible one being "The Mark of the Beast".

    We will build it. But not everyone will die. For a while, it looks like Mad Max scenario, but that will last only until the stores of pre-made resources last. The remnant of survivors will have a Renaissance as former political constraints disintegrate during the melees between the control people and the hoi-polloi. As this time around, the hoi-,polloi have access to kinetic devices that make all men equal before the laws of inertial physics.

    I see it as almost inevitable , given our exponential population growth, yet finite land area, that a reset will have to happen.

      It won't be pretty, but everything I know tells me it has to happen. I do not believe I will make it, but I am quite willing to do what I can to help younger people get through. We will be judged by how we value wisdom and compassion above all else.

    A good tradesman is of far more value to society than property owners and dealers of debt instruments. Especially if constrained by resource availability. Practical Engineers and Tradesmen will be the new "gold".