Putting the cookies issue aside, I have a privacy policy (I made it, not a lawyer so its not perfect). It doesn't save any audio, video, chat data, user names, room names beyond whats required for the app to work. I don't even require users to sign up. And to top it off, its completely open source. I'm hoping there aren't any privacy concerns.
If you do have a privacy concern, please let me know because I'm sure you won't be the only one. I just don't think cookies are significant.
Then again, it doesn't matter what I think. If people think cookies are significant that's all that really matters...hmm
If I create an AndroidViewModel in Activity_A and also create the ViewModel again in Activity_B, would I get the same ViewModel since the ViewModelStore was created on application scope?
Activity_A ViewModel only needs to know one method only, but Activity_B ViewModel needs to know multiple methods. I am trying to prevent exposing multiple methods to Activity_A that it can not use
The problem is that both ViewModels need access to the same repository but again I am stuck in the same problem, the repository would be exposing many useless methods to Activity_A ViewModel. If I make the repository as Singleton, then it would need to exist in an AndroidViewModel
If it needs to exist in an AndroidViewModel, I would have to use the same AndroidViewModel between the activities and the activities would have access to many methods they can not use
@RaghavSood Thought you may know. I've seen many apps that are able to find another device on the LAN who is using the same app in order to connect to it. How is this accomplished network wise?