Signature verification tools on the command line do not surface enough information to make it easy for their users keep track of what the unsigned input was.
I don't think their users are "end users" though. I am concerned about having better UX and making it more accessible to check these things, but for very advanced users, developers and security professionals. I think surfacing this to end users might come a few steps further down that road, but I am not thinking about that yet. I guess that's why you're talking about trust in google or f-droid, because you're thinking about end users already.
For now at least professionals should have an easy time keeping track of what the corresponding unsigned artifact to a signed artifact is, and we are far away from that right now. You have to write code for that, or inspect the binary formats of those signed and unsigned artifacts. That's not good enough. If that code is part of the tool in the first place, that automatically means that the semantics of the signature are much more well defined.