this post was submitted on 13 Aug 2024
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For those interested in the answer, I quote an answer.
Yes; that's unavoidable if you want to use applications that make use of them, as they send the notifications to Google server-side, you can't just tell them to do it differently. If you want push notifications that don't go through Google, you can use UnifiedPush, but then the apps must explicitly support it (it's the case for a few apps on F-Droid).
Only for DroidGuard, which isn't downloaded at all if you don't enable SafetyNet. Your apps will also still include Google binaries of course.
That's fairly subjective. You could trust Mozilla more than Google (but in any case Mozilla doesn't provide its network location service any longer, you will have to use something like BeaconDB instead, and of course the same how's for them), and you could still prefer for your location-related data to go to whoever they go without all the identifiers attached that Google gets, since microG doesn't really tell them who you are aside from the unavoidable IP address.
Finally, at least back in UnifiedNLP times, you could use location providers that weren't actually "network" but let you download offline databases of cells instead. Unofrtunately, that sort of option is much more limited in current versions of microG.