Belgium has adopted an “official” app so that anyone can signal for help, so long as they belong to this exclusive group:
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Must be a trusting patron of #Google or #Apple. Consequently,
- must needlessly buy a GSM subscription and surrender to surveillance advertisers who require¹ your mobile phone number (which in Belgium must be registered to an ID) — even though the app can make emergency contact without phone service… thus imposing a needless cost on users and also causing a #GDPR minimisation breach.
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Must install and execute proprietary closed-source software. Consequently,
- must trust closed-source software (by #Nextel or #Telenet?)
- must be ethically aligned/okay with running #nonfreesoftware (which does not respect your freedom)
- must maintain recent hardware, buying a new phone every few years to keep up with the version requirement imposed by the closed-source app, thus:
- incurs needless hardware cost
- produces needless e-waste
-
Must be willing to leave Tor to access the access-restricted 112.be website.
① see attached image of Google demanding SMS verification for a new account. (untested: whether a mobile number is demanded when registering outside of Tor; please reply if you know the answer to that; #askFedi)
Most of the people in Europe probably remember 112
The primary benefit to the app is expressed as not having to remember the number. It’s the main selling point that justifies the app’s existence.
Then what is your issue if you just plan to write that on your phone?
As a side note, just had a look, it’s quite common for those apps to be on Android and iOS stores only:
The app is “official”, which means there is public support and it was developed with public money. IOW, I contributed to the creation of this app, which needlessly excludes myself and others with ethical objections to nonfree software and those boycotting Google and Apple, including those who want their GDPR right to data minimisation, which implies not needing to share a mobile phone number with Google.
There are a lot of things your money is used for that you cannot use. Do you attend every university class given in Belgium, paid by taxpayer money?
I would attend classes if tuition were gratis. Either way, I have the /option/ to attend. I am not excluded, unless the university requires students to have Facebook accounts, in which case I would protest on the basis that a right to an education and a right to privacy should be simultaneous rights.
This app would be useful if it did not have the artificially manufactured arbitrary requirement to patronize Google and share information with Google that does not necessarily exist (a mobile phone number).
Have you tried Aurora store to get the app without a Google account?
https://f-droid.org/packages/com.aurora.store/
No I haven’t. And I wouldn’t since it’s still a closed source app.
I’ve heard rumors that Aurora store does not require a Google acount, but I’m not easily convinced because other 3rd party playstore apps still need a Google account because the API demands it. The Aurora store description shows this:
I’m not sure what is meant by an anonymous account. Is that a shared account that Google tolerates?
I thought the issue was not being able to get the app, now it’s the fact that it’s not open source?
I really don’t see why you are having so much Issues with a simple app
The last option might be the best for you.