Luckily, being those apps open source, a new fork has been created.
It's called Fossify. They forked all the apps on GitHub and they have a new maintainer.
Now we just need to wait for their first official release and then... we need to spread the word and make people switch from the old SMT apps to Fossify!
This is 100% of the reason we need to support open source. How many times has a megacorp bought a beloved software and shit all over it? Now, it doesn't matter quite as much, we can just move on.
I don't think the new owners can just pull it from F-Droid, I hope the F-Droid team has a code backup. I think they will migrate everything to fossify. With the gallery this already happened, the SMT Gallery vanished from my phone and the fossify gallery appeared. I guess that's a good way to go, since for now fossify is just the same thing with a different name.
I dont use any of this simple apps but im glad that someones have forked the apps source code and go further with them if i can i will give my contribute im not a android developer expert but i know the basics.
The constants updates of klotin code and android source code itself gives me less motivation...
Is not hard to code its hard to keep updated.
The question here is why some company invests in opensource code to flood the apps with trackers instead of created from scratch?
The answer unfortunately is simple 10% of all android users understand and cares about privacy and foss apps 90% dont understand or does not care about that.
That means 90% of android users soon or later are giving for free a lot of privat data to this companies and they can sell and/or use to make profit or booth.
How can we change this?
We can't.... there is only two ways to change this and they are not within our reach
1 on the shool everyone should have lessons about privacy on the internet.
Which shool take the initiative to start??...
2 create a law that prohibit companies to colect privat data.
scroll down to SMT and on each one tap it, then tap the 3 dots in the upper right corner, then check "ignore all updates". This will keep you on the current version but you'll be exposed should a vulnerability come to light down the line.