Awesome app. It is somehow not listed on android-foss list so maybe someone didn’t know about it.

Obtainium allows you to install and update Open-Source Apps directly from their releases pages, and receive notifications when new releases are made available.

GitHub page: Link.

4 points

I don’t want to watch the video on “why this app is better than fdroid”. So, does anyone care to write an TL;DR?

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3 points

Only reason I installed it is for it’s ability to use GitHub releases as a source and notify me if there are updates. As far as I’m aware you have to use f-droid repositories with f-droid – but it’s been a long time since I had f-droid installed.

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2 points

You get app updates directly from the devs, without f-droid acting as a middle man.

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7 points

For me it’s best for the apps where people don’t upload to Fdroid but I trust them

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3 points

It’s not better than F-Droid, it’s useful for apps that aren’t on F-Droid tho

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2 points

I don’t even know why that video is there. At first glance, you might think it’s a video explaining how Obtainium works. But it’s actually a video about how to manually set up an RSS feed of the apps you use from GitHub. This video is just what had inspired the developer to make Obtainium.

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2 points

It can replace fdroid with caveats. Direct download from gitlab/hub/codeberg/fdroid official with searching. Other git/fdroid repos with manual web addy entry. Good for stuff both on and off fdroid.

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8 points

Never heard of it before, but it seems better than just using f-droid. Some of the apps I use are only available on GitHub.

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5 points

Are you aware of the izzyondroid repo? That contains loads of github releases which for one reason or another haven’t made their way to fdroid yet. So far, I haven’t had to manually download any apks from github because everything has been available there.

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2 points
*

Lots. But definetly not all releases. Very convenient app!

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3 points

I use it, but I have some games that are not there and only at github/gitlab.

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4 points

I use APKgrabber just because it automatically checks for all my installed apps but this seems like a better option if you spend the time to set it up.

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23 points

This doesn’t seem super safe from a security standpoint. Can anyone comment on safety?

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0 points

What’s your concern exactly? That they’ll install malicious apps on your phone?

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27 points

Yeah fdroid is vastly preferred over this because you can be sure that the source code provided actually produces the executable.

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4 points

Am I missing something? In my experience using Obtainium it pulls apks from sources I tell it to, usually the developers git releases and even sometimes f-droid repos. This app doesn’t compile anything.

The main benefit is watching for updates directly from developers which, again in my experience, has been quicker than waiting on f-droid. You could even have it do just the notification and you can manually go download and install if you’re the cautious.

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3 points

The developer(s) could slip something nefarious in easily. We’re putting all our faith into developers that could be anybody

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17 points

F-Droid installs an APK that F-Droid compiled. Obtainium installs an APK that the app developer themselves compiled. I’m not sure what you’re getting at.

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11 points

Malicious APKs, built by the developer themselves, not matching their public source code.

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2 points

So this means you trust F-Droid? … do you have proof that they aren’t doing anything nefarious?

… if we want to play the game of ‘is it safe’ play it all the way in each case.

Like we’re acting like a dev would upload malware to a trusted repo. If we think that way, the could also slip it into the open source code and not be noticed. Anything’s possible but don’t live in fear.

There is a weird thing on Lemmy where people seem to be very worried about things that they probably shouldn’t be; then we hit a line where its just ‘ok’.

TLDR: For 99.99% of people I’d recommend just using the Google Play store.

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3 points

I thought about that argument as I was posting my reply. The thing is that with fdroid you only have to trust one instance. With something like obtainium, you are trusting every single developer whose app you are downloading. Don’t get me wrong, ultimately I am not that worried either and am using the izzyondroid repo as well which has the same issue as obtainium. But it is good to have systems in place to prevent abuse even if that abuse is unlikely.

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7 points

I disagree. Using F-Droid introduces another party and middle man that you have to trust, in addition to a single point of failure. Any checks that F-Droid does is very basic and they have said themselves that they can’t ensure apps are safe.

https://privsec.dev/posts/android/f-droid-security-issues/

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1 point

Just be aware what you install. Check the developer name and the whole path.
Some apps on F-Droid are limited for example but you can download the full featured app from Github. Later updates are anyhow cryptographically signed.

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5 points

Literally just installed this and set up with all my Foss apps, couldn’t be happier, works surprisingly well for “beta” haha

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5 points

Yeah, “beta” label is kinda meh for such a good tool!

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