February 8, 2026

Shhh... now you can read the code

DoNotNotify is now Open Source

DoNotNotify goes public: code’s out, trust’s in

TLDR: DoNotNotify released its code for public review, leaning into transparency for a privacy-sensitive app. Commenters cheered the auditability, argued over Android’s notification powers, asked why the OS doesn’t already do this, and warned Google might shut it down—while iOS and Samsung comparisons fueled the feature fight.

The privacy-first notification tamer just pulled off a crowd-pleasing twist: DoNotNotify is now open source and its code is up on GitHub. The dev, awaaz, admits they gave in to the internet’s favorite hobby—trust issues—after Show HN demanded receipts: “My promises weren’t good enough, and the community wanted more!” Cue the drama. Skeptics stormed in with a hot take: Android lets one app block other apps’ notifications? IshKebab’s eyebrow hit the ceiling with “I guess enjoy it while it lasts,” sparking a meme wave of “Notification Police” jokes and predictions that Google will shut the party down. Meanwhile, practical folks asked the obvious: “Does the OS not let you control notifications?”—aka, why do we need an app for this? The feature wars kicked off too: Samsung users flexed their Notilus, and iPhone fans chimed in with iOS’s “reduce interruptions” mode, not as customizable but “really great” for spam fatigue. Through it all, the big mood is trust-through-transparency. The dev says: check the code, file bugs, send pull requests—community in the driver’s seat, and everyone’s invited to help shape the ultimate mute button for life’s loudest apps.

Key Points

  • DoNotNotify has been open sourced.
  • The full source code is publicly available for viewing, study, and contributions.
  • The repository is hosted on GitHub at github.com/anujja/DoNotNotify.
  • Open sourcing supports the app’s privacy commitment through transparency and user verification.
  • Community contributions are encouraged via bug reports, feature suggestions, and pull requests.

Hottest takes

"My promises weren’t good enough, and the community wanted more!" — awaaz
"I guess enjoy it while it lasts." — IshKebab
"Does the OS not let you control notifications?" — nextlevelwizard
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