The Open Lie: Why I’m Trading Android’s False Freedom for iOS’s Honest Walls
For years, I was the person in my friend’s group defending Android. I had my list of reasons ready: custom launchers, file system access, and the crown jewel sideloading. I stayed for the principle that if I bought the hardware, I owned the software.
But as of 2026, Google has finally dismantled that principle. I officially moved to iOS in November 2025, not because Apple suddenly became a champion of digital liberty, but because I’m tired of being backstabbed by a platform that pretends to be my friend while locking the doors from the outside.
A Thousand “Integrity” Checks
The breaking point wasn’t a single update; it was the “cat and mouse” game Google forced me to play. With the full global rollout of the Play Integrity API and the mandatory Developer Verification for sideloading, the Android I knew is dead.
Google’s pitch is “safety,” but the reality is a bureaucracy. Want to install an open-source app from F-Droid or a niche emulator? Now, that developer has to register their government ID with Google and pay a fee just for their code to run on my device. If they don’t, I’m met with unskippable “Install from Play” blocks or “unverified” warnings that make it feel like I’m handling digital toxic waste.
Google spent a decade marketing itself as the “open” alternative to Apple’s “walled garden.” But at least Apple is honest about the wall. Google spent years letting us build a home in their garden, only to slowly replace the grass with concrete and send us a bill for the privilege.
Choosing “Knowingly Evil” Over “Pretend Good”
There is a specific kind of exhaustion that comes from being “backstabbed” by a company that markets itself on choice.
Google’s betrayal: They claim to support the open web while systematically making it impossible to run software they haven’t personally blessed. They play the “good guy” while tightening the leash every six months.
Apple’s honesty: Apple is “knowingly evil” in the eyes of a power user. They tell you exactly where the fence is. They don’t pretend you can do whatever you want.
But here’s the kicker: The “Evil Empire” actually surprises me in a positive way sometimes. Whether it’s the seamlessness of the ecosystem, the surprising utility of FaceID, or the fact that, ironically, the EU is forcing Apple to be more open while Google is choosing to be less so.
The Looming Developer Exodus
My previous daily driver was a Google Pixel 9 running GrapheneOS. I loved the philosophy and the security, but the reality of the hardware was a constant uphill battle. Despite being a flagship, the battery life on the Pixel 9 was abysmal, I felt like I was nursing a two year old device from day one.
But even if I could overlook the hardware flaws, the horizon for Android software has darkened. Google has finally moved to dismantle the principle of sideloading.
I know the counter argument: “GrapheneOS is fine! You can still sideload there!” And while that’s technically true, GrapheneOS’s hardened installer doesn’t care about Google’s “Developer Verification” gauntlet, it ignores the secondary effect.
When Google makes sideloading “high-friction” for 99% of Android users, the incentive for open-source developers to maintain Android versions of their apps vanishes. Why would a volunteer dev for projects like NewPipe or F-Droid apps keep fighting an uphill battle against the Play Integrity API and “unverified” warnings if the vast majority of the user base can’t even install the APK?
Once the “Open” part of Android is relegated to a tiny, vanishing corner for enthusiasts, it won’t be much different from an iPhone anyway.
The Repairability Irony: Living in the Philippines
Then there is the hardware itself. Living in the Philippines, I have a very specific set of constraints. If I were choosing based on pure ethics, I’d buy a Fairphone. It’s the gold standard for right-to-repair. But in reality? Good luck getting a replacement screen or a modular battery delivered to Manila from Europe without paying half the price of the phone in shipping and waiting weeks for it to clear customs.
This leads to a frustrating irony: Apple is arguably the most anti-consumer, anti right to repair company on the planet with their part-pairing and serialized components. Yet, because iPhones are the “default” premium choice here, they are, by far, the easiest phones to fix.
If my Pixel 9 screen cracks or the battery finally gives up, I’m hunting for a niche specialist in Greenhills who might have a spare part they salvaged from another dead unit. But if an iPhone breaks? Every mall in the country has a kiosk with parts in stock. The “vehemently anti-repair” phone has, through sheer market saturation, become the most repairable device in my pocket.
Resell Value: The Only “Investment” that Holds
Finally, there’s the financial “backstab” of the Android ecosystem. Buying a Pixel 9 felt like buying a car that loses 50% of its value the moment you drive it off the lot.
In the Philippines, an iPhone isn’t just a phone; it’s a currency. It holds its resale and trade-in value better than any other piece of tech. If I’m going to be forced into a closed system where I can’t even sideload my favorite open-source apps anymore, I might as well own the device that doesn’t become a paperweight the moment I want to upgrade. If Google is going to take away my freedom, they shouldn’t expect me to keep taking the “Android depreciation” hit too.
Breaking the Myths: Files, Freedom, and good Battery
One of the biggest hurdles for me was my own preconceptions about iOS. I’ve spent years assuming I’d be chained to a proprietary nightmare where I couldn’t even manage my own files.
I’m a local media person. I have folders full of MP3s, FLACs, and Opus files. I assumed that without a program like iTunes or some convoluted cloud sync, I’d never get my music onto the device. I was wrong. I transferred my entire library directly to VLC on my iPhone via my MacBook using the cable (but you can also do it on Linux or Windows and manage your iPhone). No iTunes, no subscription. It just worked.
But the real shock and the final nail in the coffin for my Pixel is the hardware efficiency. I’m using the iPhone 17, and the battery life is better than I ever expected. My Pixel 9 felt like it was constantly hemorrhaging power just by existing in my pocket.
The standby and idle drain on iOS is, by far, the best I have seen in my life. It beats any Android device I have ever owned. I can leave this phone on my nightstand at 40% and wake up to see it at 40% or 39%. On Android, that was always a gamble. If Google is going to take away my ability to sideload, they better at least give me a device that stays alive; since they can’t even manage that, the choice became easier to make.
The Bitter Trade-Off
Don’t get me wrong: I’m going to miss the furniture. I’m going to miss the universal back gesture that actually works across the entire OS, the superior keyboard experience (which Apple still hasn’t managed to replicate), and the ability to make my home screen look exactly how I want it. These aren’t just “nice-to-haves” for a power user, they are the friction-free tools of the trade.
But here is the cold reality: those features were the “perks” of living in an open ecosystem. Once Google’s sideloading policy kicks into full gear once I can no longer pull a fresh build of NewPipe or explore the repository of F-Droid without the OS treating me like a criminal the fundamental value proposition of Android evaporates.
If I’m barred from running the software I want, then a custom launcher is just a fresh coat of paint on a prison cell. If I can’t escape the tracking and the forced ad ecosystem because the “Open” part of Android is gone, then it’s basically just an iPhone with a better back button. If I’m going to be locked down, I’d rather be locked into the system that offers the best polish and hardware support, rather than one that claims to be “free” while slowly suffocating my choice.
You do you, but ain’t no way I’m going to rely on a proprietary operating system for my computing
You are 100% in the right for that. I already feel like I wrote too much but I saw that this community was a bit sleepy so I thought writing about my experience would inject a bit of life here.
I could quickly add that I am pissed that I am using proprietary OS right now. at least most of my apps are open source and my desktop runs CachyOS. However at this point or soon to be Android will be just as closed source as iOS.
It makes no sense. If you “degoogle,” you install a custom ROM which allows sideloading.
The problem is that 99% of android users don’t use custom roms. Therefore when google implements it’s new sideloading policy, there will be gradually less development of apps available outside the Play Store.
On the flip side this may induce a spur of GrapheneOS installs but I don’t think that the amount will be significant enough to justify maintaining a service like F-Droid.
https://f-droid.org/2025/10/28/sideloading.html
This is a blog post from F-Droid which explains some of the concerns relating to that.
Thanks. But i like the ability to block ads on sitea and in video.
you can use ublock origin on Safari. Brave also does it by default. I have yet to see any ads so far.
Edit: You can also use Orion Browser with the full uBlock Origin. Just make sure to deactivate the integrated adblock of Orion and you shouldn’t have issues.


