![]() I could imagine, and that is obviously only my speculation, that enough users who paid for the app would've been willing to pay for those extended efforts, maybe even anually. But it were exactly those capabilites why I paid for it > the device owner says yes or no to some action and it will be executed accordingly.Ģ.) That it became too hard to maintain the application/keep up with the changes of Android/AOSP. It'd be silly to complain about the injured foot afterwards. ![]() IMHO, when I run a rooted device, I know that I have the ability to carry out actions with _root_ permissions, so if I were to tell the device 'shoot yourself in the foot' it would execute that command just as I instructed it to. AFAIR two main reasons were given for the decommissioning of XPrivacy Pro:ġ.) its far reaching capabilites could 'break' things in such a way that things mightn't work any more. Yes, it required a rooted phone so the target audience already was the more 'advanced' group of Android users. It's successor is _far_ from its predecessor's capabilities. Then, at one point, XPrivacy Pro was put to rest. ![]() I absolutely did like his XPrivacy Pro (no, I don't mean XPrivacyLua), which I had also paid for. Preamble: Kind of semi off-topic as the thread is about Android e-mail clients but the common denominator is the developer.
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