Is there still any hope for privacy phones? 2025 and beyond
from ComradePedro@lemmy.ml to privacy@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 12:09
https://lemmy.ml/post/35233538

Google has been trying to make Android proprietary for a few years now, and that’s not news, as many AOSP default apps have been abandoned over time in favor of proprietary Google ones. This was never a huge problem for me, as you can still use those apps without network access or use open source alternatives like Fossify on a custom ROM.

However, the situation is quickly getting worse, now that Google is actively trying to prevent the development of custom ROMs and taking a page from Apple’s book by forcing developers to beg them for permission to release apps on the Android platform, even outside of the Play Store - giving Google full control.

Is there still any hope left for privacy respecting Android ROMs? What do you think will happen next? And what would be your suggestions for those looking for a phone in 2025?

If you have a different perspective on the situation, also please comment below!

#privacy

threaded - newest

crandlecan@mander.xyz on 26 Aug 12:15 next collapse

No, not really I suppose

idefix@sh.itjust.works on 26 Aug 12:22 next collapse

What about a Murena phone such as the Fairphone 6 ? Is /e/os impacted?

passepartout@feddit.org on 26 Aug 12:53 next collapse

Fairphone 6, especially with /e/os is not an option atm from a security standpoint. But then again, no phone is except iPhones and Pixels (and more recent Samsung phones).

Fairphone 6 does not keep up with standard Android privacy/security patches and has no secure element to provide working disk encryption for typical users not using a strong password, among other flaws.

Regarding privacy, Murena is shilling their own proprietary Apps as alternatives to Google.

/e/OS includes numerous non-private apps and services. The Murena voice-to-text service included in /e/OS even sends user speech data to OpenAI with no local option compared to Apple and Google both offering offline speech-to-text support via local models which users can make sure is always used:

community.e.foundation/t/…/70509

Taken from the Graphene OS forum

[deleted] on 26 Aug 13:45 collapse

.

passepartout@feddit.org on 26 Aug 13:49 next collapse

mentally unstable individual

Got any links on that?

Edit: nvm, found out about Daniel Micay being difficult to communicate with on the one hand and his history of being harassed and swatted on the other.

while only running that OS on… checks notes… Google’s phones…

They obviously don’t do that to please Google.

0x0@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 14:24 next collapse

They obviously don’t do that to please Google.

I know, it’s supposedly 'cos they’re the only good phones, which is a kinda weird take considering the diversity of devices out there but i’m not into the gory details.

passepartout@feddit.org on 26 Aug 14:39 next collapse

There are no phones with working encryption (a must imho and a lot of others) except the ones I listed in my initial comment. iPhones are no option because they are not unlockable. Samsung recently announced they will remove the option to unlock the bootloader as well. They also have a very broad and everchanging lineup of phones.

Google Pixel has been more of a hardware and software reference to developers than a Phone people would usually buy up until the redesign with the Pixel 6. There are so many hardware and software features that make it the perfect device to develop against (up until the recent events lol).

I’d recommend you to read their own documentation on this topic.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 12:53 collapse

They were a good device to develop against, at least until they started catching fire for multiple generations.

They had to degrade the 4A, a couple of 6As burst into flames. My mom has a 7, and it was overheating like mad, and seemed like it was possibly going to burst into flames. I won’t trust a Google device at least for several years after they’ve fixed these battery issues.

The Pixel 1 and the Pixel 2 were great. I even had the Pixel 3a, and it was a decent device. But since then, I’ve not trusted Google. Not recently.

tranquil_cassowary@sh.itjust.works on 26 Aug 16:28 collapse

You can just read the requirements section on the FAQ page of their website. It explains the reasoning. It’s all based on technical reasons: grapheneos.org/faq#device-support

tranquil_cassowary@sh.itjust.works on 26 Aug 16:28 collapse

There is a lot of misinformation and harassment material circulating online about Daniel Micay. Notice that they are the victim of extensive online bullying which has spread all the way onto KiwiFarms. Would suggest not consuming that content because it won’t give you an accurate depiction at all.

I’m a community member of GrapheneOS and I’ve not had any bad experiences with the GrapheneOS team or Daniel Micay specifically. They maybe communicate a bit more directly than some other people do but they are not being toxic or aggressive at all. I’ve found them to be patient and understanding.

Note that the thing many people describe as “toxic behavior” refers to posts made by GrapheneOS social media accounts in response to harassment. Defending yourself against harassment is not toxic. It might not look good in isolation becuase the quality of those conversations often degrades very quickly, which will have an impact on the GrapheneOS responses, but you have to look at those messages in context.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 16:41 next collapse

the frequency to which you keep hearing the phrase “mentally unstable” is the clearest sign that people are parroting a talking point that’s fueled by an agenda somewhere.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 26 Aug 17:54 collapse

The guy was an asshole and had to step away from GrapheneOS.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 01:37 next collapse

What did he do?

tranquil_cassowary@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 04:06 collapse

They didn’t step away from GrapheneOS. They are the founder and were the lead developer. They only stepped away from the lead developer role because they couldn’t take the harassment anymore. They are now ex-lead developer but are still project member. They haven’t left the project and will not leave the project. They will not cave for harassers and bullies.

Fairgreen@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 00:13 collapse

You’ve got to be kidding me, have you seen the Mastodon account of GrapheneOS? There is no haressnent towards them, the only ones doing the haressnent are GrapheneOS.

tranquil_cassowary@sh.itjust.works on 28 Aug 03:53 collapse

They are either defending themselves against personal attacks / harassment (which was also present in this thread before moderation intervention) or correcting unintentional misinformation about GrapheneOS features. That misinformation is often made by drawing a wrong comparison between GrapheneOS and other OSes. Correcting that isn’t harassment, just like defending yourself against personal attacks isn’t harassment.

tranquil_cassowary@sh.itjust.works on 26 Aug 16:24 collapse

GrapheneOS is not developed by a single individual. GrapheneOS has a team of around 10 full-time developers. They are not on bad terms with all other OSes, they say positive things about iOS regularly. They were also on positive terms with DivestOS before it was discontinued also mainly because it was being harassed by the same groups GrapheneOS is being harassed by.

The founder of GrapheneOS, to person you are referring to, is not mentally unstable. You are making this statement without any basis. You do not have access to their medical file. What you are saying is hugely inapprioriate and the behavior of a high school bully. Even if it were true (it isn’t), you are being an ableist, which just makes you a mean person.

GrapheneOS only runs on Google phones currently because only Pixels are able to meet the hardware requirmeents. The hardware requirements aren’t a very high bar, other OEMs just don’t prioritize security. GrapheneOS in active talks with a major Android OEM right now in order to help them meet the security requirements for a subset of their future devices. They are very optimistic about how that is going.

unexposedhazard@discuss.tchncs.de on 26 Aug 13:04 collapse

Any device and OS that uses standard google play services (and therefore its device integrity system) will be restricted from now on. So either go with AOSP+microG or just plain AOSP like lineage os.

e/os is lineage+microG so shouldnt be affected. Lots of apps like banking stuff are starting to prevent their apps from running on on google certified devices however. You will have to test case by case.

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 26 Aug 12:28 next collapse

Not on Android. People love to stan for Android because “it’s open source,” but Android would have gone nowhere if Google didn’t buy it, and Google wouldn’t have bought it if they weren’t convinced it would let them scrape more personal data than Gmail. (And Andy Rubin made Android because he heard Steve Jobs say the iPhone would run OS X, and he thought he could probably whip up a Linux distro to run on a phone.)

You could get an iPhone and not run any apps by Google, Meta, Microsoft, X, or any of the other privacy-opposed companies. You’d also better change the default search off of Google. DuckDuckGo is an option. Ecosia might be. Not sure. The issue is, while Apple says they’re all about privacy, that’s based on them being a computer/hardware company first (and Google being a data company first). However, Apple is heavily leaning into services now — Apple Music, Apple TV+, Apple News+, and more — and there are rumors they want their own search engine. So while Apple may be privacy strong now, you don’t know what they’ll be a year from now, or three, or five.

It’s like Tim Cook (Apple CEO) said about Facebook when they introduced the tracking limiter. “You can still give Facebook permission to track you all over the web, they just gotta get your permission first.” That’s true of privacy. You can still use Google, Meta, Microsoft, X, TikTok, and other privacy-violating companies’ products, but what you share is entirely up to you. You can use some of those services in Safari and block some tracking, or you can install the apps and allow it all. It’s up to you.

Or, you can buy a Pixel and reward Google’s business model, and put GrapheneOS on it. That is probably better, privacy-wise, than using an iPhone. But you’re still rewarding Google’s business model. And if they’re making so much money off your data that opting out isn’t even an option, why does the Pixel cost the same the iPhone does (and more, considering the Pixel Fold)? You are getting more RAM, but RAM is cheap. You’re not getting a better processor — Apple has won that race for years. Camera tech is about 50/50. Screen is up in the air — I think Apple’s is better, but Google et al use higher resolutions. Apple buys from the same companies but screens are made to spec which is why Apple’s are better than those by companies they buy from. Their spec is more demanding. “Good enough” is what passes in Android — it’s like how iPhones use NVMe and Androids use UFS. NVMe is more expensive, and it’s faster on paper, but in the real world? UFS is good enough. You wouldn’t see a difference, or a significant one, in real world usage. So what are you paying for in a Pixel? The lower specs plus the privacy/data factor should make the Pixel significantly cheaper… except Google is a publicly traded company, so they can’t sell it that low.

Apple may not be the best option, but they’re advertising that they are (with regards to privacy). And I think they’re trying. I’m not saying they’re saints. They are doing better than Google though. And you have to decide if that’s worth your money. And dealing with a crappy keyboard. The keyboard sucks.

0x0@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 12:34 next collapse

Or, you can buy a Pixel and reward Google’s business model, and put GrapheneOS on it.

Did you not get the memo? That might not be an option in the near future, that’s the whole point of OP asking.

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Aug 12:30 collapse

Memo about custom firmware? No. I did see the bit about Google blocking sideloading. True, I don’t follow Google/Android news as closely as I follow Apple news due to that being what I use.

That said, I know a fair bit about Android and used to do custom firmware. I know it’s never been easy, largely due to the carriers getting involved. I thought Pixels were unlocked though, at least those bought direct. In the early days when they were Verizon exclusive, the carrier bought ones were locked (this was 2016). Custom firmware in the last 5-10 years? I know a lot less about that.

ragebutt@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 26 Aug 13:01 next collapse

Apple has a search engine, it’s just not publicly accessible. They’ve had a web crawler for many years and their internal search engine is likely what powers things like siri suggested sites and information for apple maps. It is correct they could enter the search and advertising game at any moment, though unlikely because it would destroy their brand integrity.

That said apple is no saint for privacy. For one they actively enable google; they take billions from google to fund safari development in exchange for prioritizing google as built in search and feeding google user data. For a company like Mozilla this is an ethical conundrum; without googles money they’d likely be done. For a company like apple it is inexcusable. the few billion, while a tremendous amount (I think 18 billion?) is a pittance to them.

Further to your point of “active permission” with the tracking limiter this is not always the case. Apple is aware and does not do anything to reform. Part of the reason companies want you to use their app on ios is because then you will be far more likely to open links via the in app browser, which is still safari/webkit, but now escapes sandboxing and allows for far more precise tracking and fingerprinting even if you utilize the tracking limitations built into ios.

Notice how only sketchy games with tons of blatant ads will prompt the “ask ad not to track” box. Instagram, twitter, youtube, reddit, etc generally don’t because they don’t need to track you through permitted routes. Apple has long been aware of this and continue to do nothing (forcing links to open in safari or another browser, limiting traffic on in app browsers, etc). Lord knows what other tricks scumbags like facebook have to circumvent systems and track everything you do. Apple is well aware it happens without user consent but tolerates it and then has the gall to say their hardware and software is “privacy oriented”

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Aug 12:34 collapse

Yes, ironically I just read another article about how Facebook/Meta has gotten around the ATT (App Tracking thing, I forget what the other T stands for) with in-app browsers. The article’s point was that all the beef between Apple and Meta is just for show and that they need each other like Apple and Google, Apple and Samsung, et al. So yeah, with you on that.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 26 Aug 15:37 next collapse

People love to stan for Android because “it’s open source,” but…Google wouldn’t have bought it if they weren’t convinced it would let them scrape more personal data than Gmail.

I mean it can be both? Android has been awesome for many years precisely because it was open source. It’s the reason we have had and continue to have so many custom ROMs. It was open source so it could be run by Samsung, Motorola, LG, etc. while Google collected all the data. It also meant that independent developers could create their own OSs without any of Google’s BS in it. And that was fine, because us nerds are not even 1% of the market. But something seems to have changed because they’re very suddenly clawing back control of the entire OS. Pretty much the beginning of the end for private mobile devices. This trend is likely to continue faster than the community can create workarounds.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 20:51 next collapse

It was open source so it could be run by Samsung, Motorola, LG, etc. while Google collected all the data.

Wait, it being open source should have no effect on this? It could just as easily be closed source as long as Google offered licenses for manufacturers to use it.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 26 Aug 21:38 collapse

Offering licenses means they could take back their permissions at any time.

OEMs want open source for the same reasons as everyone else.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 22:20 collapse

OK, but Google essentially still has that power, despite the OS being “open-source”.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 26 Aug 22:22 collapse

That has nothing to do with Google, that has to do with the US government.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 22:32 collapse

How does it have nothing to do with Google, if Google did it, even if it was by order of the US government? Regardless, this still clearly demonstrates that AOSP being open-source has no bearing on an OEM being able to use the full Android system or even the name “Android”.

Contrast that with a fully open system like Linux, where this wouldn’t be possible. No OEM would get banned from using Linux, even if the US government ordered it.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 26 Aug 22:55 collapse

How does it have nothing to do with Google, if Google did it, even if it was by order of the US government?

Because Google has zero control over it. You’re REALLY reaching here…

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 23:24 collapse

We seem to be having a communication problem. I was originally addressing this specific statement:

It was open source so it could be run by Samsung, Motorola, LG, etc. while Google collected all the data.

Those OEMs could run Android and let Google collect all the data regardless of whether it were open-sourced or licensed, and the Huawei case demonstrated that “Android” is licensed. It’s only AOSP minus Google services that is open-sourced. I don’t understand what’s so controversial about what I’m saying.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 27 Aug 05:19 collapse

We are not having a communication problem. We have a failure to understand. If you want to challenge the entire definition of open source, that’s not something that I’m going to entertain. You can take that up with OSI. Every other open source project is susceptible to the same legal shitfuckery.

regardless of whether it were open-sourced or licensed

These are not the same. And it’s preposterous to suggest such a thing. It’s like saying licensing movies from Amazon is the same as owning them. The implications are completely different.

and the Huawei case demonstrated that “Android” is licensed

Again, only as much as every other open source project is “licensed”, as in it’s susceptible to legal regulation.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 17:48 collapse

It’s either failure to understand or you’re intentionally twisting my words. I’m not challenging the definition of open source and I’m not claiming open source and proprietary software is the same.

Let me restate and clarify what I’m saying:

  • For giant corporate OEMs like you listed, all else being equal, it makes not much difference to them in their choice to use Android on their phones whether Android is open source or proprietary. The only significant difference between the two is that open source allows them to further customize and perhaps contribute back to the OS source, if they desire to do so. If Android were proprietary and had the same market and lack of fees (or even reasonable fees to allow them to still be profitable), they would still use it.
  • The complete Android system has a unique vulnerability to attacks like the one on Huawei (compared to another open source OS like Linux), because of its deep dependence on Google’s (proprietary) play services and mobile services. The Huawei case illustrated that GPS and GMS are proprietary, are licensed, the licenses can be pulled, and Android is pretty useless to a giant corporate OEM without those two proprietary components. That’s why I’m sometimes using “open source” in quotes, because Android being open source is only useful to an OEM as long as they agree to Google’s GPS/GMS licensing.

I hope you understand my points now. If you still want to argue either of them, I think we’ve reached a dead end.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 27 Aug 17:55 collapse

I’m not challenging the definition of open source

Yes you are. You are claiming that open source and “licensed” are the same thing, because the government can get involved and take away someone’s right to open source.

The Huawei case illustrated that GPS and GMS are proprietary, are licensed, the licenses can be pulled

GPS and GMS are not components of AOSP. They are proprietary Google apps.

and Android is pretty useless to a giant corporate OEM without those two proprietary components

  1. It doesn’t matter if it’s useless or not, because it’s not part of Android

  2. Its obviously not useless because Huawei continued using using Android, minus GPS and GMS, as does Amazon.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 21:06 collapse

Yes you are. You are claiming that open source and “licensed” are the same thing, because the government can get involved and take away someone’s right to open source.

That’s not at all what I’m saying. Please point out where I said that open source and licensed (i.e., proprietary licensed) software are the same thing? First, I’m not saying anything about AOSP, which I recognize is fully open source and which I use myself. I’m talking about full Android, the trademarked, licensed product, which includes AOSP (open source) plus GPS and GMS (proprietary) components. We’re talking about Android phones here, before you go “but but but”.

From the link above:

“The “Android” name, the Android logo, the “Google Play” brand, and other Google trademarks, are property of Google LLC and not part of the assets available through the Android Open Source Project.”

“Use of the “Google Play” name and the Google Play Store icon is allowed only in association with devices licensed to access Google Play. For a list of devices licensed to use Google Play, refer to Supported devices.”

Second, a combination of open source and proprietary components is not fully open source, do you agree with that at least?

It doesn’t matter if it’s useless or not, because it’s not part of Android

It very much does matter in the case of Android because AOSP without the proprietary components is limited to a market niche. Show me one really popular phone or phone brand which does not use Google’s proprietary Play Store. Maybe there’s some edge case that doesn’t, I don’t know, but it would be the exception that proves the rule.

Its obviously not useless because Huawei continued using using Android, minus GPS and GMS, as does Amazon.

Both had to either develop their own app store or rely on a 3rd-party app store, I don’t know. But they’re definitely not using Google’s Play Store, and thus are limited to market niches like I mentioned above.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 27 Aug 22:14 collapse

Please point out where I said that open source and licensed (i.e., proprietary licensed) software are the same thing?

When you suggested that Android is licensed because the government restricted who could use it, that’s what you said. I don’t understand why this is confusing. Any other open source project is susceptible to the same fate, ergo they’re the same thing. I already explained this.

I’m not saying anything about AOSP

AOSP is Android. This seems to be where you’re getting confused.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 23:14 collapse

When you suggested that Android is licensed because the government restricted who could use it, that’s what you said. I don’t understand why this is confusing.

That’s not what I said. What I said was that the fact that Google blocked Huawei’s ability to use Android’s Google Services on their devices at the government’s orders meant that the they had a mechanism that allowed them to do so. Namely, the proprietary license for the Google Services. Do you dispute this exact thing, not some twisted version of what I said? I don’t understand why this is confusing either.

Any other open source project is susceptible to the same fate, ergo they’re the same thing. I already explained this.

How so? Do you have any examples of an organization blocking someone from using a common open source license like GPL, MIT, or Apache License, with the possible exceptions of GPL license violations or export controls for things like cryptography, etc? The fact that Google didn’t block Huawei from using AOSP most likely means that it was easier for them to ban Huawei through their proprietary license to Google Services than through the Apache License for AOSP.

AOSP is Android. This seems to be where you’re getting confused.

This seems to be where you’re getting confused too. I’ve already explained multiple times that what I mean by “Android” is the full suite (AOSP + GPS + GMS) that an OEM would need for a mass-market phone. AOSP is not enough for that. No OEM in their right mind would try to market a mass-market phone with pure AOSP and no Google Services.

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Aug 12:48 collapse

The open source thing is largely a myth, though. AOSP is what’s open source. The version of Android on Pixel phones and Nexus before them was forked from that and bundles a lot of closed source stuff, like Google Play Services, Gmail, and more. But it’s close enough to AOSP that devs can target it and it should run on most/all Android forks.

So then Samsung and others take AOSP and they fork it and make their own OS that is based on Android. They are required per licensing to use Android branding if they want Play Store access. There are other rules, like Chrome and/or Google has to be on the main launcher page, Play Services has to be included… if they don’t play by the rules, they can still fork Android, they just can’t use the name Android… like Fire OS and Switch OS. (It’s unclear if modern Switches use any Android code. Before they were released they were rumored to have forked Android. Switches absolutely do not run Android apps, but the OS borrows several cues from Android design language.)

Ulrich@feddit.org on 27 Aug 17:32 collapse

The open source thing is largely a myth, though. AOSP is what’s open source.

You say it’s a myth, then say it’s not a myth. Which one is it? Is it open source or not?

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Aug 22:54 collapse

AOSP and production versions of Android (what’s on the Pixel) are not the same thing.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 27 Aug 22:58 collapse

Yes, that’s what I’ve been trying to tell you.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 26 Aug 17:57 next collapse

You mean the company that gave Trump a gold brick. No thanks. God I wish there was more options.

monovergent@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 20:42 collapse

Keep in mind that every Apple phone is also an AirTag, even if “powered off”. This isn’t the case with most Android phones, and you can get one with a removable battery to ensure it. Sure, there’s Faraday bags, but they are easy to mess up, while you can’t go wrong with just pulling the power at the source.

Also, you don’t have to buy from Google. There’s the second-hand and discount reseller market.

We shouldn’t live life settling for the “lesser evil”, we need more hardware to support things like GrapheneOS.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 20:58 next collapse

Keep in mind that every Apple phone is also an AirTag, even if “powered off”.

This can easily be disabled in settings though.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 00:28 collapse

proprietary software can never be trusted to do what it says though. some of these tech companies have been caught “cheating” many times.

Cricket@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 00:30 collapse

Sure, I agree and am not disputing that.

cerebralhawks@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 27 Aug 12:51 collapse

It’s the other way around, it’s down to GrapheneOS to support other hardware. They simply choose to focus on Pixels.

You’re onto something with the AirTags but you haven’t got it quite right. Every Apple device participates in the Find My network, which means any Apple device marked as lost will have its location reported, anonymously, by every other Apple device it can communicate with. This is a good thing, unless you’re being stalked via an AirTag placed on your person, but Apple has taken pains to mitigate this issue. One shoe company recently released shoes with AirTag compartments so parents could track their kids, and the placement should mitigate the beeping they can emit. Honestly the AirTags and Find My network do more good than harm, the impact to devices participating in the Find My network is minimal, and if it’s your device that’s lost, you don’t want people opting out so thieves can get away with stealing your stuff.

VicSquid@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 12:30 next collapse

Well, I’m still hoping for Linux phones to skyrocket a bit when more people realize we’re fucked with Google. But as of today I don’t think we have a reliable alternative for day to day use…

Sxan@piefed.zip on 26 Aug 16:45 next collapse

We first need Linux phones to be reliable daily drivers; so far everyone I've encountered who has a linux phone says it's usable... wiþ caveats.

We have to eliminate þe caveats in at least a handful of phones, first.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 26 Aug 17:51 collapse

Give me navigation car access like car play or android auto and sure. Also good hardware I want a camera and a SOC that doesn’t suck.

0x0@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 12:31 next collapse

What do you think will happen next?

Development of Linux on mobile will ramp up.
EU or similar wrecking Google over being monopolistic would be nice but unlikely.
Same but targeting phone manufacturers.

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 26 Aug 12:51 next collapse

We need the EU to regulate Banking and Payment apps to not rely on Google apis first and mandate that they have to be available in open app stores or as apk.

Ulrich@feddit.org on 26 Aug 14:29 next collapse

They don’t even do that with their own apps.

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 26 Aug 14:53 collapse

Maybe they can regulate themselves first as a start then. They already use Matrix, so it’s not like they are completely lost regarding IT Security and FOSS.

Auli@lemmy.ca on 26 Aug 17:49 next collapse

They don’t seem to care about Apple cut for other app stores why would they care about this.

comrade_twisty@feddit.org on 26 Aug 17:56 collapse

Cause it’s a European / national security concern in the long run.

timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 03:50 next collapse

Exactly. It’s like we’ve somehow been told that we must support only the main 2 OSs and nothing else.

NKBTN@feddit.uk on 01 Sep 12:00 collapse

It’s true. There’s a fair few things with my bank I can only do with the app - they shut the web browser interface down

lemonySplit@lemmy.ca on 27 Aug 05:37 next collapse

Even just forcing them to stop blocking access on the website when they detect a phone would be nice.

I have to enable desktop mode on ironfox since ~2 years ago for my bank. Then the scaling is terrible and its hard to click buttons

matlag@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 06:24 collapse

Right now the EU regulation is pushing banks to require more of Google or Apple because it’s unclear and banks won’t take a chance of getting fined.

Among the requirements are: ensure the device and the OS were not “altered”. What does that mean exactly? Answer: [crickets].

But that’s why many banks just go with the Google Play Integrity API.

Cat_Daddy@hexbear.net on 26 Aug 15:18 next collapse

Development of Linux on mobile will ramp up

<img alt="doubt" src="https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/821d2a6b-85a2-4b82-9582-73551ad53e8d.png">

Goodlucksil@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 09:45 collapse

0,1% of Android users care enough about privacy or foss to switch to Linux if Ndroid is enshittified too much.

This may not seem like a lot, but that is (I estimate) 10 times more than the current number of people daily driving Linux on their phones.

Zerush@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 15:51 collapse

From the EU to wreck Google e-Foundation, with advantage substituting GMail, GDocs and GDrive >Murena Workspace, Murena Phones (FairPhone) with /e/OS by default, Murena is OpenSource (GitLab) selfhostable or Freemium if not, including Murena Cloud., All 100% de-googled and encrypted, no knowledge. The EU offers enough alternatives, you only have to use these.

<img alt="" src="https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/3188eb7a-bb1f-4fb6-a254-f8c3267a649f.png">

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 16:36 collapse

i was going to do this until i discovered that their non-pixel devices have poor network coverage in the united states.

also doesn’t /e/os has the same problems that other projects like grapheneos has when it comes to google locking down android?

Zerush@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 18:55 collapse

Yes, FairPhone is currently somewhat bullied by the traditional companies. I don’t think that /e/OS will have problems with Google, it’s like also Linage OS, a fork of Android (FOSS) with the only difference that all refereences and APIs of Google are gutted and out of it’s influence. It’s a pure Android code as is and as such 100% compatible with all Android apps, but these don’t depend on to be approved by Google like those for the normal stock Android.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 01:39 collapse

these don’t depend on to be approved by Google like those for the normal stock Android.

Didn’t Google recently require all app developers to register w them?

Zerush@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 02:35 collapse

In an FOSS which is free to use, to fork and modify for everyone? The only copyright that Google has over Android made, that the fork can’t be called Android nor use it’s logo, because this the forks are called /e(OS and LinageOS with different logos. Naturally Google has the right to select Android devs and those which develope apps for Google play, but this isn’t aplicable to the mencioned and other forks, these are out of the reach of Google, except if they still contain certain APIs from Google or using apps from Google Play, not the case in the mencioned forks. It’s like with Chromium, there are forks which simply patch their logo on it and those which use de-googled forks (Brave (?), Vivaldi, de-googled Chromium and also EDGE (with it’s own tracking APIs from M$) )which are not phoning home to Google.

eldavi@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 17:01 collapse

absolutely ture in a purely foss environment; but we’re talking about android phones whose manufacturers are locking down the bootloaders in lock step with google’s efforts to lock down android.

both lineageos and e/os/ are going to be difficult to maintain going forward without projects like murena making their own phones.

generator@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 13:12 next collapse

“Linux phones will skyrocketed” by who? Nerds, the comum user doesn’t care if Android is proprietary or opensource, they don’t even know.

There’s already other mobile OS but have the same issue, no apps or developers interested on making apps for it.

FirefoxOS, Ubuntu touch, something else Linux based, it’s for some nerds play on a secondary phone.

Comum people don’t stop using Windows or macOS because it’s proprietary or a privacy nightmare. EU didn’t stop selling iPhones because it’s proprietary.

It’s the device vendors that decide which OS would ship, and people will use it

traceur201@piefed.social on 26 Aug 14:33 next collapse

With that attitude it is 💅

Auli@lemmy.ca on 26 Aug 17:50 next collapse

Oh you mean reality.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 19:06 collapse

which attitude is the right one then? what will solve the problem?

Soot@hexbear.net on 26 Aug 16:43 next collapse

Android is already thoroughly Linux-based ;) You just called all android users nerds! <img alt="explosion" src="https://hexbear.net/pictrs/image/79275f15-1653-4858-8148-ee7214a6e99e.gif">

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 23:32 collapse

only the ones who know android is using the linux kernel

AssortedBiscuits@hexbear.net on 26 Aug 18:19 next collapse

comum

Comum

I read it as co-mum.

timbuck2themoon@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 03:52 collapse

And yet Linux usage on desktop is rising.

Not as much as it should be IMO but it’s fallacy to think things won’t change.

Or is IBM still top dog?

generator@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 14:49 collapse

Because the main apps used on other systems work on Linux, and also games.

Linux phones now is more Linux in early 2000, a few apps that kinda work, you don’t have banking apps, games, android auto like, streaming apps or any of most common apps used by users

Mrkawfee@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 14:14 next collapse

I hear good things about this.

unplugged.com/products/up-phone

monovergent@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 20:36 next collapse

Looks cool, but unless I’m missing something, they’ve only published a few bits and pieces of the LibertOS code

antrosapien@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 23:48 collapse

For some reason, this is blocked on uBlock

Ulrich@feddit.org on 26 Aug 14:31 next collapse

I’m afraid not.

jeff_hykin@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 17:05 next collapse

Yes, absolutely there is hope.

Phones that don’t support Google play services (AKA any hardcore privacy phone) will not be directly effected by Google restricting sideloading. The restriction is only for phones that use the Google suite. (source: 9to5google.com/…/android-apps-developer-verificat… “This requirement applies to ‘certified Android devices’ that have Play Protect and are preloaded with Google apps.”) Graphene OS isn’t going anywhere, AOSP is open source, even if Google tried to make that change in the OS, the community would hard-fork AOSP instantly and continue like nothing ever happened.

Realistically this is going to squeeze people “in the middle” towards fully-google controlled Android (one exteme) and towards fully-de-googled Android (the other extreme). Its just elminating the middle. Which is bad for people trying to gradually de-google their life, but not as dire as it might seem.

On the bright side, this is an opportunity for play-services spoofing to become commonplace and easy, and could cause more apps to avoid google play services. The EU also has a shot at forcing google to allow sideloading, since they’ve recently been forcing Apple to move in that direction.

So, while not a bright future, its far from hopeless for privacy respecting Android phones.

GreenShimada@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 06:57 collapse

This is the point, isn’t it?

Lock down their own ecosystem because they’re jealous of how Apple does it, so they can herd all users into their walled garden. Then close the gates behind them. There’s no easy way out, you can’t just wander back and forth anymore. You have to scale a wall in the dead of night and shed a tear as you look back and see everyone else having a lovely life, then set off into the dark forest of privacy on your own.

People hate friction in the first place. This is as much friction as they can realistically make on their own without triggering anti-trust cases and EU fines.

ramble81@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 17:28 next collapse

Said this in another thread

So how long until celluar providers also say you have to have a trusted device to activate your SIM? Apple, Google, Samsung, automotive and Windows would be fine and they’d probably allow their branded or limited hotspots.

This would basically eliminate any Linux option (pc or phone), and DIY devices. I could see other OOB vendors getting on board to be certified to have a certificate issued to them.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 19:06 collapse

with esim, this gets even easier for them to do.

majster@lemmy.zip on 26 Aug 17:53 next collapse

I’ll be going with Fairphone 6 + /e/os as my next phone most likely. Seems like a very decent path forward.

Schlemmy@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 18:27 next collapse

The EU. That’s where my hope lies.

ianbrown.tech/…/my-evidence-to-the-european-parli…

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 19:04 next collapse

the eu is pushing for every chat conversation to be snooped on lol

Schlemmy@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 19:30 next collapse

Denmark is.

fredrik@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 21:55 next collapse

I live in EU, and that shit drives me nuts.

Stop spying on your citizens!

matlag@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 06:26 collapse

The “EU” is a set of instances with multiple backgrounds and interests. Multiple bodies can work in totally different directions.

Renohren@lemmy.today on 26 Aug 19:09 collapse

That was then, now they are very pro FANGS and removing all barriers because they are afraid of tariffs and want the US to keep selling them weapons for Ukraine.

spacemanspiffy@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 18:44 next collapse

I’m not gonna go looking for it or share it, but I am here using my Librem 5 and kinda feeling like that kid in the meme hitting a bong in the background while people in the foreground fight.

monovergent@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 20:25 next collapse

How much does the Librem 5 satisfy what you want out of a daily driver phone?

spacemanspiffy@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 22:35 collapse

I am satisfied with it. Calls/SMS/MMS all work fine. Internet and the few apps I use work fine.

I will admit though that many (most?) others might not agree. Banking apps, GPS navigation, these are things I don’t care about.

I have gripes with the L5 but I am never, ever going back. My next phone will probably be Purism’s next phone, if they have one.

aeternum@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 27 Aug 09:24 collapse

I’m stuck with Apple or android as my bank only has an app, as in, no web interface. I could change bank, but I don’t think I’d be able to. It has features that use every day that other banks here don’t have afaik

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 12:40 collapse

I actually switched my bank, because my bank did not have a proper web interface, so I was like, you know what, fuck you, I’m leaving.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 15:02 collapse

Is all the talk about not recieving phones ordered and the poor customer service just a smear campaign or is there truth to it?

How do you like the kill switch?

What country/service are you on?

Have you heard any rumors regarding the inventory issues? They do not have US modem version of their phones in stock, even if you get the really expensive one or a refurbished option.

spacemanspiffy@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 16:42 collapse

For context, I am probably as much of a Purism fanboy as you are likely to find…

Is all the talk about not recieving phones ordered and the poor customer service just a smear campaign or is there truth to it?

There is a lot of truth to it, but I do think there were a few very loud voices making it sound worse than it was. I got mine in June 2023, and I was one of the last people on the “preorder” list. I hear a few people mention not receiving theirs still every now and then. The cases I saw mostly came down to emails landing in Spam/Junk folders on the customers end.

But I do think Purism’s support was very lacking in past years. In recent months I have seen some new faces in their Matrix and forums and the new people are really great and responsive. I do not blame certain past Purism employees who were in the firing lane for these issues. Rather I blame Purism’s handling of the refunds for drawing up enough ire to make Purism’s support reps sound like the bad guys.

The refund thing was less than great, for sure. I feel they are improving.

How do you like the kill switch?

Love em. I wish the modem powered on faster but that is nit the fault of the switch, or really a big problem. It takes like 20-30 seconds maybe. The Wifi powers on in a few seconds.

What country/service are you on?

US, Mint Mobile. AT&T also worked for me in the past.

Have you heard any rumors regarding the inventory issues?

Hmmm, maybe? I know there was supposed to be stock of new Liberty Phone main boards this year, and there was hope they would go on sale as a sort of L5 upgrade path. This either did not happen, or Purism is waiting for something to announce it.

I don’t own any other Purism hardware, and so I do not pay much attention to the L14 stock or the Mini or anything.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 20:27 collapse

Thanks so much for letting me know all that. The phones are in stock, but just not with the North American modem selections. Maybe I could contact the company and see if they will arrive soon. I makes me a bit nervous to pay so much with all the hoopla that has happened, but the big corpo stuff is driving me absolutely nuts.

spacemanspiffy@lemmy.world on 29 Aug 01:43 collapse

If you don’t commit to anything in the coming months, it may be worth checking it out after Purism (finally :)) pushes out some much needed OS updates. If you go to their forums you’ll see people talking about Crimson and Dawn, this is that update I am referring to.

monovergent@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 20:18 next collapse

Until substantially more people join the fight for privacy or something else fundamentally changes, I think there is a very real possibility of Google completely clamping down on Android while governments and workplaces mandate apps that only run on phones with all of Google or Apple’s bells and whistles.

But the folks at GrapheneOS, Calyx, and Murena seem to be a devoted and resourceful bunch, so I am hopeful that they can give something for us to work with, even if Google pulls the plug, whether it’s a fork of Android or rebasing to mobile Linux.

If that all falls through, I’ll look for whichever phone supports Linux best and eventually move everything over. The vast majority of the apps I use regularly on my GrapheneOS phone aren’t very demanding and have a decent alternative on Linux. And whatever apps are forced on me by other people will reside on a dedicated Android phone, ideally with a removable battery.

For this year, I’d still recommend a secondhand or reseller Pixel with GrapheneOS. Everything just works on it.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 23:47 collapse

we need the devs who make lineageos to come up with something, because that’s what most people have access to. and their stance is that they won’t be doing anything to bypass any of google’s restrictions.

that’s if unlocking is still a thing in the near future.

irmadlad@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 20:29 next collapse

I’ve always wanted to try one of these.

umbrella@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 23:52 collapse

yeah i can see this kinda thing becoming the resistance by the looks of it. i’m already wondering to myself if it could be practical to use something like this with postmarket or aosp.

i wonder if i could make it thinner and more ergonomic if i desoldered unused io.

SlartyBartFast@sh.itjust.works on 26 Aug 20:43 next collapse

Fuck it, I’m going back to Landline

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 26 Aug 23:25 next collapse

Weary traveler, I beseeth thee to not harken down this path.

I hear tales of dark spirits haunting those old byways. Ones of greed, with an emotionless façade, and hunger for gold from too-eager souls.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 14:57 collapse

Do tell. I heard it is just VoIP. I guess there is surveillance there too?

EveryMuffinIsNowEncrypted@lemmy.blahaj.zone on 29 Aug 07:06 collapse

I was more referring to telemarketers. Lol. I don’t use landlines anymore for that reason. I’ve thought about it from time to time, but then I hear about the experiences of other people who still have them, and apparently it’s just a telemarketer cesspool at this point.

doubtingtammy@lemmy.ml on 28 Aug 09:19 collapse

It’s more expensive than you think, and it’ll probably be VoIP even if you get it from a “normal” phone company

Core_of_Arden@lemmy.ml on 26 Aug 21:01 next collapse

Only if enough people support it…

upstroke4448@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 26 Aug 21:16 next collapse

Yes. As long as GrapheneOS still exists there is at least some hope. The sad thing is even before this outside of GrapheneOS there really isn’t any other “ROM” actually focused on privacy.

brisk@aussie.zone on 27 Aug 23:59 collapse

Graphene is focused on security, not privacy

Skorp@sh.itjust.works on 28 Aug 15:41 next collapse

This is definitely not true. GrapheneOS is focused on privacy, security, and usability. It has many features that are solely for increasing privacy and control and implemented in very robust ways. For a couple of examples, see the Contacts and Storage Scopes features.

This is a common misconception people have as a result of misinformation being spread.

upstroke4448@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 17:12 collapse

Its focused on both. The misconception people make is equating de-googling to privacy.

who@feddit.org on 26 Aug 23:04 next collapse

Related: Has anyone here used Pretty Good Phone Privacy (PGPP)?

invisv.com/pgpp/

www.usenix.org/system/files/sec21-schmitt.pdf

TeamTeddy@lemmy.world on 26 Aug 23:24 next collapse

I’ve heard that there’s phones that use Linux, so I imagine once modifying Android isn’t an option focus will probably go into making that more viable.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 14:55 collapse

There has been focus on making it not viable in my opinion. We’re going to need to use dumb phones and faraday bags soon. I am about to give up. I can not compete with a bunch of psychos with billions of dollars that constantly need more and more money and data.

TeamTeddy@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 21:18 collapse

Since my Dad wasnt able to get me a Google Pixel I’m honestly considering a dumbphone at this point. Make my Samsung a glorified MP3 player.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 29 Aug 07:17 collapse

I was thinking of selling the Samsung, getting a dumb phone or Purism. I gave an old Ipod classic thay still works. Its so nice to listen to shit with no tracking.

WhatGodIsMadeOf@feddit.org on 26 Aug 23:25 next collapse

There’s no hope for privacy at all as long as American and the 5 eyes exist.

angband@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 19:47 collapse

I was thinking this. With advances in text recognition, they can potentially filter all that data now. Since five eyes is essentially for industrial espionage, google first requiring access to source code to ensure compatibility, and that you can’t really turn off chrome web page sniffing (I have found the disabled chrome app still running, with “force stop” available,) all this makes more sense than the little bit they’d squeeze out of ad revenue chasing people who avoid chrome and google assistant. After all, it isn’t bad actors or people who already buy from google they are spending so much effort on - it is the tech competent.

bad_news@lemmy.billiam.net on 26 Aug 23:52 next collapse

Things are fine for now, but long term Google will force out FOSS third parties. Linux phones get better every day, though. I imagine Linux will be relatively ready for primetime by the time Graphene can no longer continue.

tranquil_cassowary@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 04:17 next collapse

GrapheneOS still intends to support all the supported devices until EOL. The sideloading change doesn’t affect them. It won’t apply to GrapheneOS. It only applies to certified OSes and GrapheneOS is not certified because it doesn’t license Google Mobile Services. As per the rip out of the device trees for Pixels, that just makes Pixels like other phones. GrapheneOS has been able to expand it’s automation to build that device support themselves. For new devices, making the support will take longer than it did in the past though, but they will still support those Pixels, as long as they meet the hardware requirements and still allow third-party OS support with all security features intact. Besides that GrapheneOS is actively talking with a major Android OEM right now in order to help them reach the security requirements for a subset of their future devices. They are very optimistic about that.

Android is Linux of course since the Android kernel is a Linux kernel. I’m aware you are probablly referring to using traditional Linux OSes that are typically used on desktops on mobile phones. That would, however, be a significant regression for security. Android and iOS are both modern mobile OSes with an in-depth security model which includes a mandatory app sandbox with a sane permission model. This is not present on traditional desktop OSes. This is not meant to diss on those OSes, they are just children of their time, they were created much earlier, security practices have evolved. I can see why it would be a fun experience though to tinker with, it would just not be a secure experience and it’s unlikely to get there because the improvements in traditional Linux distros go much slower than they go on Android and Android is already massively ahead.

Schwim@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 19:13 next collapse

I have seen no examples of a Linux os that is even close to being usable for daily smartphone needs and progress is laughable in most cases. What are you seeing that makes you think it’s an option for anyone but the most stubborn of users?

bad_news@lemmy.billiam.net on 27 Aug 22:44 next collapse

I’m not saying it is currently ready, I’ve never used a Linux phone. I’m just saying it will probably be fine in a decade or whenever Google manages to choke out Graphene and such on the Android side.

joshim@lemmy.ml on 28 Aug 16:35 collapse

sorry to say, but this is 100% true. i’ve tried postmarketos, manjaro and ubuntu touch – light years behind android and ios.

Jhex@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 13:55 collapse

Things are fine for now

famous call to inaction that brought us to the shitty situation we face today

bad_news@lemmy.billiam.net on 28 Aug 23:45 collapse

What specific action would have precluded Google from no longer open sourcing Android drivers for the reference device and locking down their app situation in response to the anti-trust ruling? Please enlighten me.

Jhex@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 23:49 collapse

right now? nothing because they already have a practigal monopoly… due, in great part, by the “it’s not so bad” crowd who continue to tolerate shitty corpo behaviour until “oh shit, it’really bad now”

bad_news@lemmy.billiam.net on 28 Aug 23:52 collapse

How would a more panicked attitude remove Google’s ownership from the OS they own? I am confused.

Jhex@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 23:55 collapse

it’s not panicked, it’s just a rejection of monopolistic practices… but you illustrate my point fantasticly by equating consumer rejection to panick… can’t escape consumerism, eh?

bad_news@lemmy.billiam.net on 28 Aug 23:56 collapse

Uh… okay 👍

Sailor88@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 00:10 next collapse

Plain burner flip phone and a wifi only Linux device that connects to a hotspot. F google and Apple.

Schwim@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 01:22 next collapse

Enticing but would require most to completely change the way they use their devices, unless the Linux device is in the size and shape of a phone.

Sailor88@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 03:00 collapse

That’s true but it’s either that or accept a Google or Apple phone. It’s what I do and I love not having instant reply expectation placed on me.

It’s like the good ole days before cell phones. 😂

It also allows me to significantly improve my personal privacy.

Schwim@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 03:51 collapse

For an experience a bit more familiar, you might consider a pixel, GrapheneOS and pgpp. If I understand it correctly, this setup is a Google-free and privacy-based carrier alternative to the system that is currently at risk.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 07:26 collapse

Google free but with a google phone. Yall know they can put backdoors in hardware? Does everyone not think it is a coincidence that the only phone that works well for this in the United States of Fascism is a Google phone?

dsilverz@calckey.world on 27 Aug 02:53 collapse

@Sailor88@lemmy.world @ComradePedro@lemmy.ml

I'd really love a Linux phone (personally, I have a Linux PC and I use Arch, btw) so don't get me wrong when I question: what about the banking and government apps? Yeah, because finance systems are getting increasingly digital around the world and every payment will eventually need to involve banking apps, and you guessed it: just Android (Google) and iOS (Apple), no Linux, no KaiOS. One will eventually need apps to pay for rent and consumer bills, even for buying groceries, as fiat currency will get more digital and less physical.

And, no, European Union won't fight against it because, in fact, the same European Union is seeking to digitalize EUR (see "ECB publishes third progress report on the digital euro preparation phase", published by European Central Bank on 16 July 2025). It's not a matter of if, but when physical currencies will become ruled out, and "For Our Security™", Linux (alonside other alternative OSes) will either be ruled out from internet banking altogether or it'll be forced to comply with "security requirements" that, in practice, would turn Linux indistinguishable from Android and iOS.

And this seems to be where everywhere is headed, it's not just an European or USian phenomenon. The future is bleak.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 27 Aug 12:35 next collapse

You will use Monero or Parrish.

No, seriously though, the circular economy is growing and by contributing to it, you are giving the middle finger to these fuckers.

ScoffingLizard@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 07:23 next collapse

How do we know its not a scam like the rest?

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 28 Aug 11:18 collapse

Because the government outright hates it and is doing everything it can short of outright banning it which would be a transparent violation of their own laws. When the government hates it so much that they literally write papers on purposely attacking it in order to suppress it, you know there’s something there.

Shayeta@feddit.org on 28 Aug 09:44 collapse

Monero will be illegal to own within the EU next year.

shortwavesurfer@lemmy.zip on 28 Aug 11:19 collapse

It won’t be illegal to own it. It just won’t be possible to buy it from a centralized exchange.

mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works on 27 Aug 22:42 collapse

what about the banking and government apps?

Use the browser versions. Not everything has to be done through apps

dsilverz@calckey.world on 27 Aug 23:07 collapse

@mnemonicmonkeys@sh.itjust.works

I'm Brazilian and many Brazilian banks require apps, be it for generating a unique code (e.g. Itaú's iToken) to authorize/authenticate, to scan a QR code every time the Web client requests an action (e.g. Mercado Pago and Santander), or even to do mobile-only transactions such as Pix (Brazilian instant payment/transfer) because our Central Bank (BACEN, who created and maintains Pix nationwide) requires banks to limit Pix in a per-device basis. The latter is crucial because Pix became the main payment method around here, and it can't be done through Web browsers.

Then, there are the "safety measures" inherent to these banking apps, so they refuse to work outside rawdogged Android/iOS. Even enabling "Developer mode" or having some apps installed (such as Termux; apps can see which other apps you have installed) is enough for some banks to refuse logging in (and certain banking apps won't even tell why, just some generic error message).

Also, depending on where a person works, the employer may require the employee to receive their paycheck at a specific bank, which in turn will require an app if the employee is willing to use their own paycheck to pay their bills. Banks have been trying to push their mobile internet banking to their customers, with many banks (such as Bradesco) closing many of their physical branches so people have no nearby ATMs to do banking things.

Finally, even browser-based internet banking (e.g. Caixa Econômica Federal) sometimes require the installation of software akin to kernel-level anti-cheat because "muh security", and some will support neither Linux nor virtualized Windows (most (if not all) virtualization hypervisors can be easily detected by techniques such as the Red-Pill).

So it's not as easy as "use the browser versions", unfortunately.

guismo@aussie.zone on 28 Aug 11:07 next collapse

That sounds horrifying. Although also completely predictable and expected, but I didn’t know that in Brazil it had reached that level. Isn’t Lula supposed to do something about it? Back in his first presidency (I was in Brazil back then), Linux was becoming the main OS.

Although the usual 2 party system ensures that the next government would destroy everything, so I imagine all the open source effort was demolished and it can’t keep being rebuilt from scratch every 4 years, when the next government return everything to microsoft.

Anyway, I sent you a message because I have personal interest in the issue. Thanks for the useful but horrifying information.

int32@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 28 Aug 11:12 collapse

well need a wine for android. or just a vm. EDIT: I momentarily forgot about waydroid…

dsilverz@calckey.world on 29 Aug 02:22 collapse

@int32@lemmy.dbzer0.com

There is Android virtualization already (e.g. Genymotion, Android-x86 project, QEMU, among other projects), but just as "Red-Pill" can detect virtualization for x86-based systems, the same concept applies to ARM-based virtualization, and banking apps would likely detect the atypical environment. Also, things such as fingerprint reader (needed to authenticate for certain banks) are likely to not work properly for emulated environments.

int32@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 29 Aug 11:41 collapse

I also momentarily forgot about it, but there’s waydroid! if we modify it a bit(make it look more normal, like make it think some common apps are installed), we should be able to get it to run banking apps. also just don’t use fingerprints(but that could also be implemented).

Bronstein_Tardigrade@lemmygrad.ml on 27 Aug 01:55 next collapse

At this point, I’m just hoping to grab a HarmonyOS phone soon. I’d rather have China hoovering up my data than the US, 5 &14-Eyes, and fascist US tech corporation. Terrible compromise, but I don’t see an inexpensive Linux phone on the horizon any time soon.

Ilandar@lemmy.today on 27 Aug 04:09 next collapse

It doesn’t have to be one or the other, it is still possible to live without a smartphone (for now).

Bronstein_Tardigrade@lemmygrad.ml on 28 Aug 01:47 collapse

In order to obtain and maintain a visa where I live, I am now actually required to maintain a mobile phone number. You are correct, I could live without a mobile phone, but I’d really miss the GPS.

Ilandar@lemmy.today on 28 Aug 02:57 collapse

I said smartphone, not mobile phone. Some feature phones also have GPS functionality.

HiddenLayer555@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 05:22 collapse

Issue is whether you can even use it outside of China because of the wireless band difference. I had a Fairphone in Canada that suddenly stopped connecting to the network.

Bronstein_Tardigrade@lemmygrad.ml on 28 Aug 01:38 collapse

I’m quite sure HarmonyOS won’t even be available in the US, and probably banned being it’s Huawei. Since I don’t live there, I don’t care. Asia will be using Harmony with 6G, while the west trundles along with ever more restrictive OSes, 5G, and an ever aging internet infrastructure.

graymess@hexbear.net on 27 Aug 02:53 next collapse

I hope so. But I’m gonna be real grumpy about it when I can’t tap to pay for shit anymore because all of the standardized payment apps will only work on signed Google and Apple devices.

sudoer777@lemmy.ml on 27 Aug 03:25 collapse

I thought tap to pay was already restricted like that

graymess@hexbear.net on 27 Aug 04:35 collapse

It is, but I’m fine with using stock Samsung in exchange for near complete control of my own device. They take away side loading and I’m out of here.

DupaCycki@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 13:39 next collapse

As of right now, it’s looking like GrapheneOS will be unaffected, and Google has yet to lock down the bootloader. So this should remain a valid option for at least 2 years.

Other than that:

  • Any smartphones with an unlocked bootloader + any ROMs without gapps
  • Chinese smartphones with non-Google Android builds
  • Linux smartphones
  • Bonus: Huawei is about to release their own non-Android OS, but I wouldn’t expect it to be privacy-friendly

Honestly there probably isn’t any good, long-term solution. Personally I’m somewhat shocked we’ve gone this many years with reasonably open smartphones. Next step is probably closing bootloaders in new laptops, as part of the switch to ARM (which is already undergoing).

StarMerchant938@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 19:59 collapse

I’m pretty seriously considering the pinephone. I think it’s super neat there’s a LoRa module backplate you can buy with it, although my understanding is nobody has made it work with meshtastic yet.

DupaCycki@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 23:21 collapse

I’m a huge fan of Pine64, but I wouldn’t expect the PinePhone to be a great replacement for an Android smartphone. Personally I have quite extensive experience with PineBook Pro, PineTime and PineBuds Pro. I haven’t had the chance to try the PinePhone, but I’d definitely go for the Pro.

Even then, prepare for a junky experience and forget about lixuries such as good camera, nice screen, smooth UI/UX. Their devices are great, and the ideas behind them more so. But unfortunately they rarely work well, perhaps with the exception of PineBuds Pro.

deprecateddino@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 16:50 collapse

FYI, the Pro has been discontinued: pine64.org/2025/08/14/august_2025_short_update/

DupaCycki@lemmy.world on 29 Aug 08:48 collapse

Hey everyone! As many have noticed, the PinePhone Pro is currently out ot stock on the Pine Store. Unfortunately we have to deliver you the following news: the PinePhone Pro is officially discontinued. We were told it didn’t sell well enough to keep production going. But the good news for current owners are that spare parts will still be made for up to two years, depending on demand. Meanwhile, the trusty PinePhone (A64) is still alive and kicking, and Pine Store plans to keep it rolling for about two more years.

Well, that sucks. So I guess the better move here would be to wait for something new? I don’t think the regular PinePhone is at all viable as a daily driver.

ILikePigeons@lemmy.ml on 29 Aug 20:05 collapse

Depends, if it used as a dumbphone (calls, SMS, being in sleep most of the time), it is okayish. However, going outside dumphone sphere, it becomes cumbersome to use.

StarMerchant938@lemmy.world on 01 Sep 05:33 collapse

If it can handle basic calling and texting, mp3 playback, and occasionally open my banking/email (both of which have acceptably usable mobile websites) I think I can work with that. If I’m home I use my computer, if I’m out and about I’m too busy to be on my phone for more than it takes to transfer money or fire off a quick text.

locahosr443@lemmy.world on 27 Aug 22:42 next collapse

Linux phone will hopefully become realistic thing.

But the more this goes on the more my attitude has changed. I now do far less on my phone, I’m more careful about what I expose to it. As a result I spend very little time on it and that’s been great.

To be clear I hate what’s happening, it’s just been working out to improve my time.

myfunnyaccountname@lemmy.zip on 28 Aug 01:52 next collapse

This is America. We don’t do privacy and consumer rights. You will freely give all your data to a tech company where you are the product up for sale.

ftbd@feddit.org on 28 Aug 12:07 collapse

This is the internet, not America

CodenameDarlen@lemmy.world on 28 Aug 22:03 next collapse

I think you still can have a Linux phone with GNOME, there’s a GNOME version for mobile.

After all, what is a smartphone? Just a convenient computer that can make calls.

Linux + GNOME will do that for you.

This is from 2022 and it looks pretty good to me: …gnome.org/…/gnome-shell-on-mobile-an-update/

eelectricshock@lemmy.world on 31 Aug 23:20 collapse

This is just hearsay but apparently GrapheneOS will be unaffected from Play Store control.