If Blackberry wasn’t run by complete idiots, they would swoop back to number one share with a privacy phone.
linux phones are a security nightmare and should not be taken as a serious option by any person of interest.
What I find depressing is more the fact we can fix it, creating a true microkernel, where parts are isolated, yet not a single soul manages a radicale instance to start.
I literally can’t due to the falling falling yen.Ah yes, because trusting your security to an American tech company which controls your OS is so much more secure 🙄
Maybe Linux phones are less secure but more private? With Android and iOS a lot of effort has been put into restricting what each application can do. With standard Linux that’s less rigorously controlled, which is why there are security enhancements and sandboxing extras a distro can optionally add. So standard Linux may be less secure by default. But it doesn’t have all the surveillance built in that the mainstream phone OSs do, so it’s also by default more private.
Still, “security nightmare” sounds extreme. Wouldn’t a phone running a version of Debian be comparably secure to a computer running it?
That’s the problem, unfortunately - being comparably secure to Debian isn’t very secure at all. The state of linux desktop security is very much a nightmare (madaidan’s insecurities is a good primer everyone points to, though you should take it with a grain of salt and it’s a few years old), and without security you’re an exploit away from having no privacy either.
So we’re left with few options, none of them ideal, while the world becomes increasingly more difficult to be participate in without making android or ios a part of your life:
- Use a stock android phone, which is just straight up and unabashedly a spying device meant to milk you for value like a dairy cow. Sacrifice privacy for convenience.
- Use an iphone, which is the same thing shrouded in a layer of niceness. Sacrifice privacy for convenience and a bit more security.
- Use an android variant that focuses on freedom, like lineageos. Sacrifice a bit of convenience for some freedom and some privacy.
- Use grapheneos. Sacrifice a bit of convenience for security, some freedom, and some privacy.
- Use a linux phone, running something like postmarketos. Sacrifice security for freedom and privacy.
Read up on the options, understand the realities, and choose the tradeoff that best fits your preferences and lifestyle.
Thanks - that was interesting and informative, if a little depressing.
mlfh gave the actual explanation for why I said what I said. No American tech company controls LOS/GOS/COS/etc.
any POI should be using at the very least, LineageOS, though they should probably be using Graphene.
Then make them secure everyone can complain and do nothing, write code develop ecosystem
Not everyone is a senior specialist with decades of experience and troves of free time.
Always good to participate, but you cannot expect an average Joe to fix everything they complain about.




