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It reduces the attack surface area, and in theory allows more thorough vetting of apps that are eligible to use the permission without spending additional resources. I say in theory because I have the impression Google wants this to be almost entirely automated and isn't actually doing a good job vetting apps that use risky permissions.

> that's not an open ecosystem

No, it is not. Did someone claim it was?

The open ecosystem of Android is that users can choose to install apps from any source they like. Apps like Syncthing-Fork and (full-featured) Nextcloud are available from other sources including F-Droid. Google does a couple things to privilege its own store, though I think those are being mitigated due to legislation and litigation.



> No, it is not. Did someone claim it was?

No, we said that's what we want it to be.




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