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People don't tend to need to browse local archive formats on their phones I guess, and if they do, they'll have a file manager app with support.
There's support for some formats if your files are in cloud storage like Google drive, which is a more likely use case for phone users
I'm using a Samsung tablet that doesn't support rar for example.
I suppose you'd fall into my "you'd install a file manager app if you actually needed it" category
Yeah but it's still weird that there is no native support
I think a big part of it for RAR specifically is that it's a proprietary format that would technically require Google to license it, and for the tiny percentage of users that would benefit, they don't bother.
A seemingly random but relevant example is the Japanese travel card situation with Pixel phones—every pixel on the planet has the necessary hardware to support Japanese travel cards since the pixel 6, however only pixel phones bought in Japan can use the feature (locked by the OS) because it would mean Google would have to pay a per-device cost worldwide.
This is kinda a similar situation I'd bet, they've proven they would rather not include the feature than pay for licensing
Unrar is free enough.
And there's not really any money to be made charging licenses to open source projects—see ffmpeg/vlc
Google including it in android though means they can charge licenses as a per unit fee because, basically, Google (or phone manufacturers) is a company with money.
What? This has literally nothing to do with unrar's license terms.
We're talking about Android, unrar doesn't have anything to do with this really.
RAR is and will continue to be a proprietary format with an owner who can seek royalties.
It's like saying Google should stop licensing MPEG because ffmpeg exists—it simply doesn't work like that
The entire topic is about RAR archive support on Android, so of course the freely available source code of unrar, released by the RAR developer himself, has absolutely to do with everything here.
Nope, unrar's source code is free, released by RAR's developer.
Nope, it absolutely isn't like that. You just have no clue at all.
It's not FOSS, given that it comes with the provision that no RAR compressor can be created based on unrar source code but for browsing and extracting RAR archives, the unrar source code as is is absolutely fine.
Ah fair play, I didn't realise unrar was from the same guy, cheers for the extra context.
So I guess we go back to what else it could be:
There's probably other reasons I've not thought of, but just a couple of the above are enough to explain it IMO