We already have one for the Danish government's apps. It's called 2.1 stars. /s but also not really /s because most of our official government apps are actually rated rather poorly.
But seeing how the best rated app by the Danish government is actually rated 4 stars on play store, a badge may be in its place.
Depends, some of the government apps are actually pretty well done and you don't want to end up with an unofficial ID card app that steals your identity.
The German Ausweis App is a good example of a well done gov app.
btw, Ukraine's Diia (дія) app is pretty good too and mostly open source (both backend and frontend components are fully open source, but document microservices which directly contact govt registeies in order to fetch the data are kept proprietary; they would be useless without proper authorization anyway though)
it also provides seamless authorization using managed keypairs (i.e. instead of using your own hardware keys to sign electronic documents, you can just use the app, which also provides a convinient oauth-like flow. Signing up for a bank account literally turns into a single tap, a face scan, and providing e.g. salary info etc)
Not to be a dick, but how/why is that useful? It's not a package I need to physically go get or something. It's deposited into an account (super fast if you do your taxes early). This also assumes I'm getting a refund.
I will receive my tax return when I receive my tax return. If it was a website, I might consider using it. But an app? No, thank you. I'm good. A web browser is more sandboxed and has less permission than any app does.
Now why would i participate in mass murder when i can avoid it by taking every handout possible and laugh as the government collapses under its own dead weight?