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46% Positive

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#google#android#recaptcha#linux#phone#don#cloudflare#more#attestation#services

Discussion (242 Comments)Read Original on HackerNews

coppsilgoldabout 8 hours ago
My understanding is that this new reCAPTCHA is basically just remote attestation.

Remote attestation doesn't use blind signatures (as that would be 'farmable') so tying the device to the 'attestee' is technically possible with collusion of Google servers: EK (static burned-in private key) -> AIK (ephemeral identity key in secure enclave signed by a Google server) -> attestation (signed by AIK). As you can see if the Google server logs EK -> AIK conversions an attestation can be trivially traced to your device's EK. This is also why we don't really see and probably never will see online services which offer fake remote attestations, as it will be pretty obvious that the next step of running such a service is getting Google as a customer and having all your devices blacklisted. Private farms probably won't last long either as I'm sure Google logs everything and will correlate.

Unless something special is done with this new reCAPTCHA not only are you locking internet services behind TPM chips but you are also surrendering anonymity to Google. Unless you acquire untraceable burners for every service, the new reCAPTCHA will be technically capable to tying all your accounts across all these services together. Much like age verification. It may appear that the service would need to cooperate to link the reCAPTCHA session to your registration but the registration time alone will likely be sufficient (the anonymity set will be all but destroyed).

tardedmemeabout 6 hours ago
If you run a website, it seems trivial to forward the attestation to someone else by putting the same code up on your website, and getting their device banned from google instead of your own.
coppsilgoldabout 4 hours ago
Realistically, what Google will do in such a scenario is collect data about the illicit service, enumerate the devices the farm uses and what other activities the devices participate in. What you suggested has far less control over the devices that generate the attestations and it will show.

Also, if the implementation is competently done the phone will show the website for which you scanned the QR code. A user would be able to see whether or not that matches the site where they observed the QR code and proceed accordingly. In time Google will probably integrate it into the Chrome browser where a proxied QR code cannot even be shown.

ChadNauseamabout 4 hours ago
The domain in the attestation would be yours, so that wouldn't work
Groxxabout 4 hours ago
Some people will notice, some will not
chadgpt2about 4 hours ago
How would the phone camera know the domain name of the website displaying the QR code it's scanning?
rdedevabout 5 hours ago
When companies like this exist, what is the point of relying of TPM? Looks like the future is bright for VC backed bots

https://doublespeed.ai/

NikolaNovakabout 4 hours ago
I'm assuming that's a troll / sarcasm / fake... But that could just be my last vestige of faith in humanity.

Edit: aaaand... That's another little sliver of my faith gone : https://www.theatlantic.com/podcasts/2026/04/how-fake-people...

djeastmabout 2 hours ago
Yeah, it's real. Say goodbye, faith!
failuserabout 4 hours ago
How is this not grounds to be sued into oblivion by Google and Meta? They clearly violate ToS for profit. This is something I expect to find on a dark web forum where 0days are traded, not in public.
xmcp123about 3 hours ago
This kind of thing has been common for ages. Obviously AI has kicked it into overdrive, but it’s not darkweb kind of stuff.

Note that they do not mention any specific companies on that landing page. That is pretty intentional.

But realistically going after bots is expensive and rarely successful, so most companies don’t do it. Even if you find the guy, the chances they can be legally reached are pretty low.

SlinkyOnStairsabout 3 hours ago
> How is this not grounds to be sued into oblivion by Google and Meta?

Because they don't care. It doesn't matter that it's AI slop, it generates views. And Google and Meta can bill advertisers for those views.

Zuckerberg is paying people to put AI slop Shrimp Jesus on facebook. (Not directly to platforms like this, but with the incentive structure)

Really, they're not just cashing in on the views of AI slop being put in front of boomers. They're cashing both ways; While the low end spam industry is merely guessing and iterating on whatever generates views, the more refined spammer does not leave the performance of their latest slop post up to chance, and just uses good old viewbotting. Viewbotting that these days, is mostly done on real devices. Which show ads, to the bots or underpaid developing world workers. Google and Meta'll still charge you for those impressions though.

The losers? People who sincerely try to use these platforms, and whatever idiot businesses are still paying for ads by the impression or click, rather than conversions that immediately generate revenue.

chadgpt2about 4 hours ago
Violating ToS isn't illegal in most cases. Companies just put scary looking clauses in their ToS to discourage you from doing things they don't like.
tardedmemeabout 3 hours ago
These companies would have to buy one phone per fake influencer.
dakolliabout 4 hours ago
Why is every startup using that same Serif font now, Garamond or whatever. Is it an LLM design phenomenon? Its kinda ruining that font style for me.

Also $1,500 a month for 10 "influencers" is wild. This doesn't seem that sophisticated unless they're doing something special to increase trust scores of accounts. They say they have "in house warming algorithm" which honestly doesn't inspire confidence for me.

Whats funny is its almost a certainty (if they are doing things correctly) that they have literal farms of phones (probably in SEA). The only real way to keep trust high is to have a real mobile connection and unique devices. Proxies are okay, but you really need to use the apps on real hardware.

alexspringabout 2 hours ago
Yep. They got hacked in the past, 1k+ smartphones reported.

The cost is the attestation keys of a real phone. Once it gets burned, the phone is useless to them.

https://www.penligent.ai/hackinglabs/inside-the-ai-phone-far...

etaioinshrdluabout 4 hours ago
I think the font is mimicking old Apple ads, eg: https://i.insider.com/5bf8592eb73c284de50e2f28
tcoff91about 5 hours ago
Wow that is so dystopian.
thaumasiotesabout 5 hours ago
> My understanding is that this new reCAPTCHA is basically just remote attestation.

Yes, somehow "parse this QR code" would not have made my top 500,000 list of 'tasks that a human can do more effectively than a computer'.

lxgrabout 3 hours ago
I'm sure some people still remember how to mentally decode QR codes and verify ECDSA signatures from Covid days. Public transit ticket inspectors in my city also seem to be quite proficient at it :)
getpokedagainabout 6 hours ago
Stop visiting sites and using services that use reCAPTCHA. Problem solved.
tardedmemeabout 5 hours ago
With the new reCAPTCHA this is going to happen because most human visitors will actually be unable to pass the CAPTCHA. It will be interesting to see whether this makes websites ditch reCAPTCHA or whether they literally just don't care about having customers, an attitude that seems to be getting more and more common every day.
papercruncherabout 4 hours ago
I have been unable to give my money to Home Depot, REI and a growing list of online retailers because they use Akamai EdgeSuite, which just assumes I am a bot and 403s on protected API calls. This happens consistently on any IP and any browser on my Linux desktop/laptop.
raincoleabout 2 hours ago
> most human visitors will actually be unable to pass the CAPTCHA

Most human visitors will never ever notice the change. reCAPTCHA is completely invisible for most human visitors because they are allowed to pass just by fingerprint.

It's not like an average user is going to have to scan a QR code every time they visit a site via web browser. If it were like this then it would be a non-issue because no sane website would adopt this system. But it isn't.

g-b-rabout 5 hours ago
One problem with these things is that businesses have minimal visibility on the amount of users they lose.

On the opposite, if they see reports of many visitors not completing the captcha, they're likely to think "Wow so many bots!!! This defense nowadays is indispensable..!".

Sometimes you need to pass a captcha even to contact them (if you want to tell them that you can't pass their captcha).

sandworm10135 minutes ago
>> whether they literally just don't care about having customers

So every government website. Every website where people simply have no choice (DMV) or where failure to login results in them not claiming the money/benefits they are due (all tax websites). And every website handling post-sale complaints (Airlines, insurance).

lxgrabout 4 hours ago
I'd love to, but I'd not be able to visit many sites anymore thanks to Cloudflare...
vascoabout 1 hour ago
So what are you doing here?

> Ask HN: Did HN just start using Google recaptcha for logins? [0]

> dang

> No recent changes, but we do sometimes turn captchas on for logins when HN is under some kind of (possible) attack or other. That's been happening for a few hours. Hopefully it goes away soon.

[0] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=34312937

g-b-rabout 5 hours ago
Yeah, live in a cave, and problem solved.

However much I hate it, right now among the sites using reCAPTCHA there are many that I strongly want to use.

Let's find a better solution please

flatIronSteakabout 4 hours ago
> Let's find a better solution please

Is there an argument here that Google is creating a monopoly?

Could this be challenged on similar grounds that forced Microsoft to recommend other browsers to users on Windows?

g-b-rabout 5 hours ago
sieabahlpark, I probably hate this more than you, you misunderstood
reaperducerabout 5 hours ago
Stop visiting sites and using services that use reCAPTCHA. Problem solved.

No. Bigger problem created, since there are innumerable government, health care, and educational web sites that use reCAPTCHA.

I'm not going to give up reading the test results from my doctor because of some simplistic ideologue decides that it's "problem solved."

ethinabout 3 hours ago
The other problem with this is that there are few CAPTCHA alternatives.

CF turnstile is one, but of course that means Cloudflare owns even more of the web.

HCaptcha is inaccessible and actively discriminatory against individuals with disabilities and refuses to change, to the point that I suspect the only way that they will do anything is to file a class-action against them and sue them into the ground.

And I... Can't think of anything else. Other than to just get rid of Captchas entirely.

majorchordabout 4 hours ago
> I'm not going to give up reading the test results from my doctor

You could just call them.

unethical_banabout 5 hours ago
I agree, and I think CAPTCHA is a disservice on public websites.
g-b-rabout 5 hours ago
I don't see any requirement to support hardware attestation in the recaptcha documentation, the Play Services seem to be "enough".

I think it's most likely to be attested by Google remotely; they might be using an app (with enormous access to the phone as the Play Services have) to be able to link a ton of data together, possibly including the local activity on the phone, officially to make better humanity assessments based on it all.

For people using a Google account it probably won't make a huge difference, in terms of data collected.

If that's how it would work, spoofing would probably be theoretically possible, but it would be easy for Google to detect attestations used by multiple people.

Let's not forget that this is an update to a very approximate system, absolute security is not (yet) required.

But there's a good chance that it will be extremely hard to sidestep, despite that.

lxgrabout 3 hours ago
> they might be using an app (with enormous access to the phone as the Play Services have) to be able to link a ton of data together, possibly including the local activity on the phone

But anything your phone can possibly do in software can be spoofed, so how would that help?

varispeedabout 3 hours ago
Shouldn't that be illegal under GDPR?
dheeraabout 6 hours ago
> Google didn’t demand iPhone users install Google software to pass the test.

Can de-Googled Android phones present themselves as iPhones?

coppsilgoldabout 6 hours ago
Apple has their own remote attestation infrastructure and you will not be able to impersonate an Apple device without extracting private key material from the secure enclave of a legitimate Apple device or compromising Apple certificate authority private keys.
lxgrabout 3 hours ago
Is this actually available in Safari?
thaumasiotesabout 5 hours ago
Can they present themselves as... web browsers?
tardedmemeabout 5 hours ago
Yes, and then they'll get served a QR code that you have to scan on a phone Google approves of.
dwedgeabout 4 hours ago
I've kept a spare cheap android for too long and recently went with Graphene instead. I have one Google profile and only use it for Uber, work's Google Chat and maps. One bank refused to work (even with Google services) so I moved bank. I've moved most of my mobile use to self hosted (freshrss full text, password manager, calendar, tasks) with no direct internet connection.

It's a bit irritating but I'm glad I started down this journey because it looks more and more like I'm going to be avoiding the internet

ryukopostingabout 2 hours ago
If you don't mind me asking, what Bank? I've resolved that this phone will be my last googled phone, and my next will be GrapheneOS.
dexterdogabout 2 hours ago
Not OP, but I've been on GrapheneOS for a few years and I have no problem with Chase, CiT or Wealthfront. I mostly use them to check balances and unlock debit cards, but they all login and function fine.
drnick1about 2 hours ago
My setup is similar and nearly 100% self-hosted, including email, files, AI. If something does not work on Graphene, I will do without it. I also have a Google profile, mostly for testing purposes.
xerox13sterabout 2 hours ago
How have you managed to accomplish self-hosted email? I tried similar in 2022 and found it damn near impossible without business static IP or a cloud provider.
drnick1about 2 hours ago
I have access to a commercial (non-residential), fixed IP. You could also use an outgoing relay as a compromise, since presumably the issue you are facing is other servers rejecting email that you send from a disreputable IP. That being said, you really want a fixed IP as a matter of convenience if you are going to self-host anything.
gonzalohmabout 4 hours ago
What's the best alternative for Google drive? I also went this route but Samba is a bit annoying sometimes
BloodyIronabout 1 hour ago
Nextcloud, Samba serving SMB isn't really equivalent.
komali242 minutes ago
Nextcloud also has lots of interesting plugins. I recently found a viable Splitwise alternative I chucked on my instance.
drnick1about 2 hours ago
What makes Samba annoying? I think it's perfect for its intended use (LAN).

If you need to share files externally, Nextcloud works very much like Google Drive and allows the creation of sharable links.

bsmithabout 3 hours ago
If you dont need filesharing, you can just setup wireguard, setup a network drive on your phone's files app.l, and then when connected it'll feel like native file browsing.
danparsonsonabout 4 hours ago
Syncthing is very nice.
dwedgeabout 4 hours ago
I only share with one person so we use Seafile
pixel_poppingabout 5 hours ago
archive.is just asked me for a QRcode scan, I'm so ashame of that crap (it's behind Cloudflare), forcing website visitors to KYC? Are you guys insane!?

the web is ruined if you push for this, this is millions of websites that will suddenly force KYC? What...the...f

https://ibb.co/X9Q6Y84

By KYC, obviously it's because there is very few non-criminal ways to have a SIM without KYC and get a Google account for Playstore without a number, so every website visits will be attached to a real ID.

I don't use a stock Android, right now I literally can't access many websites, this is genuinely crazy.

codedokodeabout 4 hours ago
Interesting, the text says "reCAPTCHA doesn't share your details with this site", but it says nothing about sharing your details with Google. Which means yes?
syntheticnatureabout 2 hours ago
I thought archive.is were the ones squabbling with Cloudflare (extreme simplification)
j027about 2 hours ago
You can still use the audio captcha, but I’m not sure how long that’ll be around.
BloodyIronabout 1 hour ago
Google will incur serious lawsuits if they remove that accessibility aspect.
a2128about 1 hour ago
Google has already been crippling the audio CAPTCHA access for many years. If your trust score is low enough, the visual challenge is ridiculously slow and noisy, and pressing the audio challenge button will just give you an error saying "To protect our users, we can't process your request right now", accessibility be damned. Where are the lawsuits? I want to believe there are still forces that would create hell to pay for doing something so evil, but I'm not seeing any.
tom1337about 3 hours ago
i wondered the same earlier and i am pretty sure they are just mimicking cloudflare's validation page. no way that cloudflare is paying reCAPTCHA when they have theor product, turnstile, available.
stavrosabout 2 hours ago
What? Don't Cloudflare literally have their own CAPTCHA service? Why are they using reCAPTCHA?
gruezabout 2 hours ago
They mimic the cloudflare captcha page but they're not hosted by cloudflare.
Imustaskforhelpabout 4 hours ago
> https://ibb.co/X9Q6Y84

Wow, This is really bad :-(

I think this is just gonna make viewing internet without a phone significantly harder especially with archive.is and the likes.

Not sure, how relevant this is to the discussion but if it helps, I have made a project[0] which allows to archive archive.is pages on archive.org/wayback machine (this uses singlefile)

Perhaps something like this can be used by community at scale too. Also, I hope that archive.is does something to fix this issue of requiring QR code and hopefully it doesn't become a permanent issue.

[0]: https://smileplease.mataroa.blog/blog/htmlpipe-and-how-we-ca...

thecatappsabout 6 hours ago
I'm failing to see why they didn't just adopt Private Access Tokens (not that they're great either), where they could have at least:

- pretended that it wasn't all about invading peoples' privacy.

- done a good ol' fashioned "but Apple does it"

- pretended to be standards-oriented

- advertised it as something completely transparent to the end-user

Seems like that would've caused a lot less backlash while still achieving the goal of having some form of device attestation -- but I'm guessing that's not the real goal.

treisabout 5 hours ago
It doesn't fundamentally solve anything. You want to be able to identify a specific person or at least a relatively expensive device so that if you ban them they stay banned.
incompatibleabout 2 hours ago
"pretended" ... do they even care any more?
FateOfNationsabout 5 hours ago
Not Invented Here Syndrome?
tinycommitabout 3 hours ago
Eww. Ok, so, I’ve used reCAPTCHA on sites I maintain at work, just on forms to prevent excessive bot spam submissions. No way do I want to subject users to this BS, though. Does anyone have recommendations for other decent captchas that could be used instead?
ksymphabout 3 hours ago
I run into https://www.hcaptcha.com/ and https://friendlycaptcha.com/ from time to time as a user without complaint. Can't speak to the latter but I've used the former a bit and it does the job.
BloodyIronabout 1 hour ago
Any chance for something 100% self-hostable? hcaptcha and friendlycaptcha last I checked require interfacing with their services.
tardedmemeabout 3 hours ago
hcaptcha is pretty popular these days. It uses a very wide variety of traditional visual puzzles.
himata4113about 2 hours ago
in my good ol' days I just sent a screenshot to 2captcha for grid of the entire captcha iframe which means that the solvers would have to figure out what to do instead of having to write code for each different type of captcha. to solve their new rotating puzzles I would just capture them at 50% opacity twice and change the prompt to pick the highest brightness object since 50% opacity would dim the moving elements.
cornholioabout 6 hours ago
It's a move to block competitor AI agents while securing access for your own, classic ladder kick. The market for autonomous agents providing services and doing online work will be gigantic so, unless you want your own bots locked out from ie properties guarded by Amazon, CloudFlare, Microsoft etc., you will need a bargaining chip.
hedoraabout 3 hours ago
As someone that uses AI agents, this makes me want to install a browser plugin for "public windows" that just archives everything I see, and then farms out clicks of content that are missing from those sites.

The result of this would be to upload it all to a bot-friendly alternative to archive.org.

cantalopesabout 5 hours ago
This is crossing the line where the governments should step in and ban/fine google heavilly for this monopol behavior
data-ottawaabout 4 hours ago
How you know this is a monopoly is that if you go on their documentation website half the video is how this rolls into Google Analytics.

This is using another product to reinforce the search and ads monopoly.

You can’t scrape content to build a better google or Gemini, you can’t make an OS to compete with Google or Apple, and you can’t make a Google Analytics competitor.

It’s plain anti competitive.

failuserabout 4 hours ago
The governments are the ones who needs the most. They want to know who all the potential and current dissidents are.
bigyabaiabout 3 hours ago
Bingo. Remember all the people on HN who canvassed for consumers to vote with their dollar? Absent-minded consumption is what consumers voted for.

Now everyone pretends like it's monopoly abuse because the Leopards Eating Faces company finally rang the dinner bell.

milderworkaccabout 5 hours ago
I agree. There are pretty clear grounds here to think about opening an investigation here into illegal tying, or a misuse of market power. Not sure if the FTC maintains a presence on here, but if you're listening...
OutOfHereabout 5 hours ago
Instead, our governments use this crap, meaning on .gov sites too, and impose it upon us.
varencabout 2 hours ago
I have a good friend who doesn't own a cell phone. He's a math professor. Every year he keeps living life without a smartphone, I continue to be more impressed. Things like this makes me feel like he might have to eventually give in. https://archive.is is now serving, via Cloudflare, this QR code backed CAPTCHAs. There seems no way to get past them without a smartphone. Sad times. I wonder at what point even basic government services will essentially require a smartphone.
gruezabout 2 hours ago
> https://archive.is is now serving, via Cloudflare

It looks like a cloudflare page but it's not hosted by them. eg. https://bgp.he.net/dns/archive.is#_ipinfo It's hosted by AS49505 JSC Selectel

j027about 1 hour ago
To add onto this, cloudflare switched away from recaptcha a while ago. https://blog.cloudflare.com/moving-from-recaptcha-to-hcaptch...

I think they now use their own Cloudflare turnstile if I remember correctly, but back then they switched to hcaptcha.

phyzome36 minutes ago
I don't have one either. No plans to get one, even with this.
lxgrabout 4 hours ago
Almost completely unrelated, but I recently helped out a very confused family member with deleting not one, but two Google Cloud accounts they had no idea existed, and that they only learned about from an email referencing reCAPTCHA getting integrated into some other Google product offering.

I have absolutely no idea what happened there. My best theory so far is that they clicked on some really, really wrong buttons when solving a captcha themselves while logged in to their Google account in the same browser. Bizarre.

brunocvcunhaabout 4 hours ago
AI Studio playground maybe? It seems all integrated.
lxgrabout 4 hours ago
They almost certainly didn't use that.

The projects were named after a Google Doc they'd recently worked on (or a .docx attachment they'd received?) though, so my other guess is that they somehow created a Google Docs macro or similar by accident?

arccyabout 2 hours ago
probably Google Doc Apps Script, those create so many Google cloud projects
amlutoabout 4 hours ago
I would love to see someone challenge this as an anti-trust violation. Google is using its market power (as the provider of reCAPTCHA) to actively prevent devices that don’t use Google Play Services from competing effectively.
himata4113about 2 hours ago
I did something unpopular and just didn't have a captcha, I just read up on creepjs etc and rolled out my own which is just browser state analysis, basic ip check (abuse lists only) and PoW. Haven't had an issue with a single bot registration (yet).
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buzzwordsabout 4 hours ago
Given the way Google is going I'm not sure if my next phone will be Android. I am fully aware that I am probably in the minority here. For me the trust is entirely gone.
fluidcruftabout 4 hours ago
There really isn't much of an option. Apple's just as bad if not worse.
LeoPantheraabout 2 hours ago
> Apple's just as bad if not worse.

Could you justify that? Because to me it seems like Apple isn't doing anything even like this.

queenkjuulabout 4 hours ago
At least with an Android i have the option of Graphene, and have access to a terminal, and for now can sideload apps.

With apple there's no choices, so I'll continue to take my chances with Android

fluidcruftabout 3 hours ago
Possibly... but the extension of this to Android and Apple is going to be the entire internet shuts you out. And everything else will be a giant Dead Internet crawling with bots.
lxgrabout 3 hours ago
Can Graphene OS pass this kind of Google attestation challenge, though?
chadgpt2about 4 hours ago
Both are terrible for privacy so it comes down to which one has a nicer screen now. :(

I'd rather have Google check an Apple phone attestation than have Google check a Google phone attestation, and vice versa, though, because you can assume each company is trying to keep as much information private to themselves instead of giving it to the other. Google is probably just getting "yes it's an Apple phone" and some kind of temporary token, instead of my IMEI, IMSI, phone number, all signed in accounts, biometrics and so on.

drpixieabout 2 hours ago
I'm inclined towards keeping an ancient android for those apps that require it, and maybe something open for actual use. Or perhaps a crappy old android for android and a small non-android tablet/laptop for daily-driver stuff, which always works better as a computer anyway!

I'm also becoming open to using software that lies to google about what it is :) Google will treat us like sh*t, why shouldn't we reciprocate.

cyklosarinabout 4 hours ago
Motorola + GrapheneOS next year could be an alternative. So far they've been relatively insulated from the changes that have been coming down from Google.
doctor_radium21 minutes ago
I'll be waiting.

In the meantime, I'm currently using a low end Motorola moto g 5G 2023 which lets me turn off Play Services. Chrome and the Google Calendar don't run (really do need to find a replacement calendar), and I couldn't be happier. Motorola's interest in GrapheneOS makes me wonder if they did this on purpose.

nosioptar43 minutes ago
I've been getting asked more and more how to degoogle stuff by non-nerds.
ryukopostingabout 2 hours ago
You won't be alone. I've resolved that this will be my last Googled phone.

My dad runs the family domain/emails/etc. The hard part will be convincing him to degoogle the whole family.

drnick1about 2 hours ago
Android yes, but Graphene is the answer.
pzmarzlyabout 4 hours ago
Does anyone know what changed in iOS 16.5 that made Google stop requiring the app? To me it seems to correlate with Private Access Tokens, aka remote attestation by Apple. https://developer.apple.com/videos/play/wwdc2022/10077/
smallerizeabout 2 hours ago
This isn't just about weirdos (like me) who run GrapheneOS. Huawei phones don't have Google Play services installed, or Xiaomi phones with MIUI China. That's what, a billion and a half phones that can't get to your website now?

Amazon tablets don't have Google services either, which hints that the upcoming Amazon phones also might not work with this.

ezekiel68about 6 hours ago
I don't know why reclaimthenet hasn't embraced the obvious answer: Simply create a new smart device operating system with a fully disentangled cosmos of programs, libraries, APIs, app SDKs, hardware partners, drivers, trust networks, carrier agreements, app stores, documentation, conferences...
drpixieabout 2 hours ago
Same reason as "make another (better) windows" is very difficult - almost everyone wants to be able to run existing apps and drivers, so you're forever playing compatibility catchup with android (or windows).

That's the reason companies are desperate to be first/biggest - once you're it, you're it until you finally fall on your face and dwindle to a nobody.

cybercatgurrlabout 5 hours ago
and that is gonna be funded by who? anyone who is gonna fund that is gonna want their slice of the pie. we need regulation to keep big tech in line
repelsteeltjeabout 5 hours ago
How about consumers paying a little extra for their device? The way it's going, add sponsored big tech is dieing because click fraud detection is becoming too expensive. Either we give up privacy and track every user, or we let bots have at it, stop targeting ads to users and bill advertisers on bandwidth.
flatIronSteakabout 4 hours ago
I uh.. I think that was the (sarcastic) point.
gesshaabout 2 hours ago
Parent is sarcastic
fsfloverabout 5 hours ago
Mobian, PureOS, postmarketOS already exist. Sent from my Librem 5.
colordropsabout 6 hours ago
Ugh I hate that I can't tell whether you are being sarcastic or not.
Vampyre15 minutes ago
The engineers at Google are like the Hitler youth of technology. While I can understand the forces that created them, they make me sick.
kyrofaabout 5 hours ago
I don't even have a smart phone, I assume there is some sort of fallback behavior?
mzajcabout 5 hours ago
The fallback is that you get redirected to a website helpfully demanding you buy a Google- or Apple-vetted smartphone: https://support.google.com/recaptcha/answer/16609652.

You will also see this page if your smartphone is degoogled and you try to open the reCAPTCHA attestation URL in a web browser instead of in Google Play Services.

userbinatorabout 1 hour ago
We told you. You dismissed it, and thought we were just crazy conspiracy theorists. Too brainwashed by the mainstream propaganda about "threats" to see the truth. Now they're even more emboldened by how much they can herd the sheeple, and showing their actual goals even more clearly.

Spread the news, tell everyone you know, before it's too late. I wish we won't have to resort to even more drastic methods in this fight.

"Those who give up freedom for security deserve neither."

dstnnabout 4 hours ago
Its going to be just like the wild days of the late 90s and 2000s

Strap in, the ownage will be hard.

drnick1about 2 hours ago
So Stallman was right, after all?
quantummagic9 minutes ago
Everyone, including Linus Torvalds, who rejected Stallman as too political or ideological, and advocated for "pragmatism" instead, is part of the reason we're where we are today. And it's going to get a lot worse, before it ever gets better.
xethosabout 1 hour ago
One thing I hope we've all discovered by now is that, if Stallman hasn't been proven right at the present moment, on any topic that touches on libre computing, is that it's only a matter of time until he is
hedoraabout 3 hours ago
Is there a way to just ban all these sites? Like a firefox plugin or whatever that detects this crap, and just bounces over to some place more reputable, like archive.is.
Permitabout 2 hours ago
It looks like archive.is uses recaptcha so I don’t think that’s the fix you’re looking for.
tardedmemeabout 2 hours ago
then we make a new one
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spankibaltabout 7 hours ago
Time for some lawfare!
DANmodeabout 6 hours ago
The Government reviewed the Google situation on behalf of you,

and on behalf of the Government,

and said “data, so piss off”:

https://abcnews.com/Technology/google-hit-antitrust-lawsuit-...

https://macdailynews.com/2026/02/04/u-s-files-appeal-in-goog...

userbinatorabout 1 hour ago
If the masses can somehow point the absolute loose-cannon that is the current President at Google, things might actually change.
Computer0about 6 hours ago
warfare*
KPGv2about 4 hours ago
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lawfare

> Lawfare is the use of legal systems and institutions to affect foreign or domestic affairs, as a more peaceful and rational alternative, or as a less benign adjunct, to warfare.

wurtapp21 minutes ago
Heh
Worfabout 5 hours ago
I don't use Android right now and haven't used Google'd Android for almost a decade. And I won't. If this is the hill I die on, so be it.

I'm not going to use any sort of hardware attestation, especially one controlled by Google. You shouldn't either, even if you have an unrooted Google-certified Android phone.

brikymabout 5 hours ago
It's all fun until you can't get paid because some fintech app doesn't work. That's why we need regulations. I don't see politicians ever going against an advertising company when they're customers.
freedombenabout 5 hours ago
Indeed, I generally favor being conservative with regulations because they can genuinely impede progress and can be really hard to change or remove when they're bad, but this is an issue that we need regulation for. It's just too much in the interest of big tech to lock us down and strip us of our freedom of compute. Short of regulation.

Unfortunately I see the regulatory environment more likely to go the other way of requiring attestation. I sure hope I'm wrong.

mikepurvisabout 5 hours ago
An easy first step ahead of a full ban would be insisting that hardware attestation never be used as a gate to access government services. Most other things I can vote with my feet, but viewing my tax returns or renewing my passport are things that can only happen in one place.
pino83about 5 hours ago
One unfortunate aspect of the entire problem: Go back, let's say 10, 15 or 20 years, when forces were a bit more balanced than today. When all these issues were already quite obvious, but probably somewhat easier to solve. The same people that cry loudly today were completely ignoring all these issues. Actively. And when someone came up with them, that guy was just an idi*t, disturbing the good mood. Right? I can still remember all the conversations that I had, or that I read. Today, they'll deny that and still call me an idiot. Anyways...

PS: Sure, there always were a handful of exceptions. If you are one of them, you know what I'm talking about. I don't refer to you. But to the other 99.x%.

KPGv2about 4 hours ago
> Unfortunately I see the regulatory environment more likely to go the other way of requiring attestation. I sure hope I'm wrong.

Everyone in power wants it, across the entire globe.

retiredabout 4 hours ago
Already happening. The official German identification app, AusweisApp, is designed exclusively for Android and Apple mobile devices
lxgrabout 3 hours ago
> designed exclusively for Android and Apple mobile devices

That's very different from requiring hardware attestation, though.

somethingweirdabout 4 hours ago
No, you can also get it for Windows and Huawei devices. So three American and one Chinese companies. Great.
ranger_dangerabout 3 hours ago
If it was developed by the government, shouldn't the source or an API be available? Surely third-party apps can be made in that case?
lukashahnartabout 3 hours ago
What do you use instead? iOS?
ranger_dangerabout 8 hours ago
Sites that use reCAPTCHA/Turnstile/etc. have already been broken for me for years now due to neverending captcha/refresh loops.

My ISP regularly changes everyone's IP, and I apparently share an ISP with people who suck, so I get flagged just trying to do all sorts of normal things. Some examples:

- I've never bought anything from Etsy but I'm somehow banned from even viewing their site at all.

- Discord immediately bans me any time I try to create an account.

- Can't buy flights from Delta, always gives a non-descript error.

- Can't buy concert tickets, it thinks I'm a fraudulent buyer.

- Most CF sites produce a "Sorry, you have been blocked" page, or just loop.

- Trying to buy products on a shopping cart will have my order silently flagged/canceled for "VPN usage" (I don't use one).

- Some sites/programs block me for being on the DroneBL or similar lists I did nothing to get onto, and have verified many times that it's not really coming from me.

I just take my business elsewhere... eventually I'll probably just stop using technology at all.

Jigsyabout 7 hours ago
> Sites that use reCAPTCHA/Turnstile/etc. have already been broken for me for years now due to neverending captcha/refresh loops.

I had this problem recently with the Indeed website. (Cloudflare Captcha)

Thanks to someone on Reddit, it was discovered that anyone using a Chromium based browser (Brave, Vivaldi, etc.) on Linux was being punished.

Awfully frustrating having to set up a Virtual Machine just to be able to access one website via Firefox since even my hardened Firefox was being punished.

anonymousiamabout 6 hours ago
Why not just change your user agent string?
codedokodeabout 4 hours ago
Because the site can compare the user agent with navigator.platform, which your browser fills with great care.
tardedmemeabout 6 hours ago
It probably fingerprints the browser via TLS fingerprinting.
mschuster91about 6 hours ago
That's useless, in fact it makes you stand out even more. There are SDKs that can differentiate based on an awful lot of signals if your user agent corresponds to your actual browser version.
miladyincontrolabout 5 hours ago
Almost would bet one or a few of your ISP's customers have their connections being used as residential VPNs.

I know people like to think of suspicious android box setups but even a lot of "free" apps, extensions and other such services scarily seem to do that duty these days. I'm sure I'm preaching to the choir here, but its sad how many people will use some free of cost vpn and not even think why that might be.

ranger_dangerabout 4 hours ago
Yes, I have even seen mobile android games that include notices about a BrightData SDK or HolaVPN etc. where their idle bandwidth is resold.
donmcronaldabout 2 hours ago
Does the app function as a proxy? I always assumed that wasn’t possible.
chadgpt2about 4 hours ago
Honest question: Is there anything scary about this apart from lowering your ISP's reputation score?
donmcronaldabout 2 hours ago
Yes. What if your connection is used for illegal activity?
rescbrabout 4 hours ago
This is why I ended up paying extra for a static IP from my ISP. While they always provided me with a public IP outside a CGNAT, I guess whole IP blocks were being targeted by these web security providers.

I guess my ISP allocates static IPs from a separate pool, and probably my IP block neighbors are better behaved (probably SMBs and other fellow nerds), aside from platforms learning that my IP is safe.

Captcha difficulties are way down now.

hysanabout 7 hours ago
Turnstile feels bad as a user. Every site that I’ve seen it long will lock up Safari hard while it’s doing whatever it’s doing. But at least I haven’t run into more than 2 refresh loops.
retiredabout 5 hours ago
I have not been able to visit AliExpress for months now. Just an endless reCAPTCHA loop.

I wonder if they are seeing a decrease in traffic and somehow find that acceptable.

prism56about 8 hours ago
Oh man I feel you. I turn my VPN off on certain sites due to the captcha loop.
Milpotelabout 7 hours ago
Wouldn't a 1£ Linux VM as Wireguard access point suffice?
ranger_dangerabout 7 hours ago
Nope, I have tried. Just as suspicious to them if not moreso because it's a datacenter IP and not residential. I even have a list of sites I've tried to visit that were explicitly blocked from datacenter IPs, and that file has over a hundred hosts in it now.
ck2about 7 hours ago
whenever I can't access a website for various stupid blocks

I fire up cloudflare warp and walk right through it

use wireguard with wgcf in environments without cloudflare client

yeah it's stupid we have to do this in 2026 but I guess cloudflare is the new AOL garden

wafflemakerabout 6 hours ago
You sir seem to have solved a problem many people here have.

Would you care to elaborate a little on how you did it?

It doesn't happen that often to me, but sometimes adblock setup I'm using results in such issues.

tardedmemeabout 6 hours ago
He just told you, he used cloudflare WARP. It's a "VPN" along the lines of NordVPN et al, but by cloudflare, so it gets special treatment by cloudflare's walled garden enforcement system.
titularcommentabout 5 hours ago
the fact that this works, as well as cloudflare having a literal web scraping tool available as another product honestly makes my blood boil.
BloodyIronabout 1 hour ago
I'm sorry Google, I'm afraid I can't do that.
codedokodeabout 4 hours ago
To be fair, there are already apps that require a mobile phone to sign up, for example, VK, Telegram. And I think Google requires to scan a QR code to register account, so it is easier just to buy a Google account on a black market if you need it for some purpose.

Nobody trusts web browsers nowadays.

danparsonsonabout 2 hours ago
I think you and I move in very different social circles...

I would have no idea how, nor desire to purchase a Google account on the black market, and I do in fact still trust that my web browser can do TLS correctly.

tardedmemeabout 2 hours ago
I think you can just search 'buy google account' - it isn't illegal.
OutOfHereabout 5 hours ago
If there was any remaining doubt whether Google is evil, this settles that yes it is.
djfergusabout 4 hours ago
What happens with Chinese Huawei phones that don’t have Google services?
yohanneskabout 5 hours ago
Isn't reCAPTCHA a spam? This video I watched recently does a nice history and also was enjoyable to watch https://youtu.be/seX_rDEsP6E?si
citizenpaulabout 6 hours ago
For Decades the huge tech companies basically faced no adversity whatsoever. Now for the first time in their existence the massive returned investments in AI they are experiencing ... we will call it pain.

I would say it will be interesting to see what they do but I think rent-seeking, oppression, human rights violations would be more apt.

They were of course trustworthy proviers while they were untouchable but now I know how things are gonna go.

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cyberaxabout 5 hours ago
I think it's possible to run the Play Services in an emulator, faking the device type. Google doesn't seem to use the platform attestation for now.
SV_BubbleTimeabout 3 hours ago
Treatment is not a cure.
cyberaxabout 2 hours ago
Agreed. I'm just pointing out the possibility (for now).
hackernews682about 8 hours ago
The gate to the pig pen is closing…
tamimioabout 7 hours ago
And soon desktop OSes will follow, if you don’t have TPM you won’t be able to browse half of the internet.
roywigginsabout 1 hour ago
Not soon, now. The new reCAPTCHA on desktop shows you a QR code for you to scan with your Google-approved phone to prove you have one.
Andrexabout 6 hours ago
A parallel, fully public and accessible internet being widespread and available for anyone with a slight tinkering kick... Could actually be really awesome.

Let the commerce-driven, corporatized hellhole that the modern web has become eat itself.

spencerflemabout 4 hours ago
I love the vision, but I do wonder how the parallel internet will deal with DDoS levels of bot traffic.

I hear ‘web of trust’ pretty often and I like the idea but that’s not anonymous or accessible either

donmcronaldabout 2 hours ago
> I love the vision, but I do wonder how the parallel internet will deal with DDoS levels of bot traffic.

Something that makes it expensive to initiate a connection and cheap (relatively) to accept or reject would probably help. I think that’s a hard problem though.

SV_BubbleTimeabout 3 hours ago
Well, how does Tor or other services do it now?
anonymarsabout 3 hours ago
What a coincidence that Windows 11 makes it a requirement!
fsfloverabout 5 hours ago
TPMs can also be based on free software and our own keys. It works well with Heads and Librem Key.
cyklosarinabout 4 hours ago
TPM with things like Heads are borderline zero security and theater compared to actually decent implementations on Android/iOS platforms, I doubt the big companies would rely on that. TPM in general on non Mac/Chromebook PCs is mediocre even from big OEMs.
neilvabout 2 hours ago
After all the surveillance capitalism abuses over the last 2-3 decades of Web, it's a little late to be pushing back, but... should we start shunning individuals from companies who implement this?

Whether it's from companies that create the tech, or companies that use it.

In the orgy of money, we've had a kind of industry-wide sociopathic convention of individual engineers considering it perfectly OK to further surveillance capitalism.

Can we reverse that?

If someone says we can't, because "everyone does it", are they saying that we're a field of baddies?

ChrisArchitectabout 7 hours ago
Related:

Google Cloud fraud defense, the next evolution of reCAPTCHA

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48039362

Google Cloud Fraud Defence is just WEI repackaged

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=48063199

einpoklumabout 5 hours ago
Google seems to be putting yet another brick in the garden wall.
kittikittiabout 7 hours ago
Please stop calling Android Linux. It's a marketing lie that continues to disappoint, including here. You're holding Linux back substantially by claiming Android is part of it. Just because it has Unix doesn't mean it's Linux as MacOS is also Unix.
bellowsgulchabout 3 hours ago
I’d just like to interject for a moment. What you’re referring to as “Android,” is in fact Android/Linux, or as I’ve recently taken to calling it, Android plus Linux kernel.

Linux is not an operating system unto itself, but rather a kernel—a core component that manages hardware resources. Android uses the Linux kernel, but replaces the traditional GNU userland with its own runtime, libraries, and system framework.

Many users run Linux-based systems every day without realizing it. Through a peculiar turn of events, the Linux kernel combined with Android’s userspace is often simply called “Android,” and many of its users are not aware that it is built on Linux at its core.

There really is Linux in Android, and these people are using it, but it is just a part of the system they use. Linux is the kernel: the program in the system that allocates the machine’s resources to the other programs you run. The kernel is an essential part of the system, but useless by itself; it can only function in the context of a complete operating system.

Android is normally used in combination with the Linux kernel: the whole system is basically Android/Linux, a Linux-based operating system with a distinct userspace, not a GNU/Linux system like traditional desktop distributions.

PaulHouleabout 7 hours ago
The kernel is a Linux kernel. The userspace is very different from a typical Linux distribution.
g-b-rabout 6 hours ago
A fork of it, updated periodically

And let's not pretend that we mean the kernel when we say Linux distribution

charcircuitabout 5 hours ago
Debian also uses a fork that is updated periodically.
yjftsjthsd-habout 6 hours ago
Android literally is a Linux distro, though. Like, sure it has a weird userspace and is user hostile, but that doesn't make it not a Linux distro.
cybercatgurrlabout 5 hours ago
linux is a choice, this is not a choice. fairly confident people are rejecting this notion on ideological grounds
Ylpertnodiabout 5 hours ago
> ... and is user hostile,

How so?

IsTomabout 6 hours ago
It's the punishment for all the times people laughed at calling regular Linux "GNU/Linux".
prophesiabout 7 hours ago
Unless it was in a previous iteration of the submission's title, I don't see Linux mentioned anywhere.