Comment by edgineer
19 hours ago
It's not all-or-nothing; sometimes some people at Google push for some things to improve privacy. Rarely happens when revenue is at stake.
Android used to ask you "do you want to alllow internet access?" as an app permission. Google removed that, as it would stop ads from showing up. Devastating change for privacy and security, great for revenue.
It's not great for revenue, it is their revenue.
People act like Google products are a charity that had been free forever, and then this mega-corp called Google came along and started harvesting the data of innocent people who just want to get directions to Starbucks.
Google is pretty much just a wrapper around DoubleClick.
GrapheneOS still does this -- allows controlling internet access on a per-app basis.
For those of us stuck on normal android, is there a way to achieve that? I know it used to work with some firewall apps but nowdays they all require root access.
Netguard No Root Firewall still works for me: https://github.com/M66B/NetGuard
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It looks like you can't revoke the internet permission, but you can use the firewall via ADB. Settings are lost on reboot, but you can use an automation with Tasker or similar to set them on boot:
https://www.reddit.com/r/tasker/comments/1mxjnvs/how_to_bloc...
Not the same thing, but you can install an app like Blokada Libre to block ads and trackers in all apps.
https://blokada.org/
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Go to settings > App > $SCUMMY_APP > Mobile Data & WiFi. Uncheck all.
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iOS allows this, but only on mobile data, which is pretty infuriating. Why should I not be able to also restrict apps from dialing home/anywhere just because I'm on a Wi-Fi network (which isn't even necessarily unmetered)?
It's really annoying. I have a sudoku game on my phone, works great but give it internet access and it's suddenly full of sketchy adverts.
If I'm playing it on my commute, it's usable with mobile data disabled for the app. But when the train stops in a station long enough to auto-connect to wifi, immediate full screen adverts :(
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It's one of the big reasons I advocate for graphene even if one chooses to install Google services afterward.
Also notable: as of last year, OnePlus allowed mobile and WiFi network toggle, effectively doing the same thing.