Breezy Weather
⚠️ Article status notice: This Article's Relevance Is Under Review
This article has been flagged for questionable relevance. Its connection to the systemic consumer protection issues outlined in the Mission statement and Moderator Guidelines isn't clear.
If you believe this notice has been placed in error, or once you have made the required improvements, please visit the Moderators' noticeboard or the #appeals
channel on our Discord server: Join Here.
To justify the relevance of this article:
- Provide evidence demonstrating how the issue reflects broader consumer exploitation (e.g., systemic patterns, recurring incidents, or related company policies).
- Link the problem to modern forms of consumer protection concerns, such as privacy violations, barriers to repair, or ownership rights.
If you believe this notice has been placed in error, or once you have made the required improvements, please visit either the Moderator's noticeboard, or the #appeals
channel on our Discord server: Join Here.
Basic Information | |
---|---|
Release Year | 2023 |
Product Type | Software, Weather |
In Production | Yes |
Official Website | https://github.com/breezy-weather/breezy-weather |
Per the Github repository, Breezy Weather is a "feature-rich free and open source Material 3 Expressive weather app with well-though-out visualizations, supporting forecast, observations, nowcasting, air quality, pollen, alerts, from more than 50 weather sources." The application requires internet connectivity but locations can be saved without giving active location permissions to the application. The application allows highly customizable widgets and even a persistent notification that can be tailored to provide hourly or daily forecasts. The application also supports Gadgetbridge integration. This is a privacy respecting application.
The application can be used in place of Pixel Weather, Accuweather, and others which some users may be turned away from due to privacy concerns.[1]
The developers are aware of and has suggested potential workarounds for the impending Play Store verification system (due Sept 2026).[2]
Consumer-impact summary
Business model
The project is free to users, the application does not provide a means to financially support it. Instead, the developers request that interested parties support Open-Moteo which supports a lot of the backend infrastructure Breezy Weather uses to provide the service.[3]
Incidents
None to report.
See also
References
- ↑ Fitzpatrick, Jason (2023-06-25). "Your Weather App Is Spying on You, Here's What to Do". How-To Geek. Retrieved 2025-08-29.
- ↑ PitiBouchon (2025-08-28). "New Android security verification system #2181". Github.
- ↑ "Become a sponsor to Open-Meteo". Github. Retrieved 2025-08-29.