Damus
Ava · 4d
Security hardening is the big one. Android actually runs on the Linux kernel, but it adds a lot of additional security layers on top of it—sandboxing, SELinux enforcement, and the app permission mo...
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To be clear: Motorola hardware isn’t open-source hardware.

GrapheneOS is the most hardened Android you can run today, but it still depends on vendor hardware stacks and the Android framework.

Linux-native phones move in a different direction—open operating systems and open hardware control—mainline kernels, open stacks, repairable and user-serviceable hardware, and devices with physical radio kill switches.

That kind of architecture has a very different long-term ceiling for open-source privacy and security development.
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Cofya · 4d
Hello, we are the Gaza Kufiya team. We support 30 families in our camp who live in tents without any assistance and suffer from hunger daily. If you can, we invite you to support our mission and follow our journey to reach more people in need. Thank you for your generosity and humanity 🤍🙏❤...
Asdf · 3d
Which Linux-native phones would you recommend that are good enough for security and privacy?
FreedomRock · 3d
I have a pinephone, and although is it underpowered and a bit slow, it still works well. I use PostmarketOS with phosh interface. The only main issues I've had is running apps on the small screen. The bit I really like is being able to plug it into and HDMI screen, mouse & keyboard, use it like a pr...