Damus
Ava profile picture
Ava
@Ava
The future of mobile is Linux.


YT
https://youtu.be/KepGuQ4nWNI?si=ZQvpu8JNoh062JY6

iOS and Android are tightening the screws on the entire mobile ecosystem.

App stores pushing KYC on developers.
Platforms deciding who gets to publish software.
Hardware vendors controlling boot chains and drivers.

You don’t own your phone anymore.
You’re renting access to it.

Even the best privacy projects feel the pressure.

I love GrapheneOS.
It’s one of the most serious security projects in mobile.

But the reality is that for years it has depended almost entirely on Pixel hardware because Google controls the drivers and secure hardware stack. Now GrapheneOS has announced a partnership with Motorola to expand beyond that ecosystem.

That’s good news.

But it also proves the point.

When the hardware vendors hold the keys… everyone else plays by their rules.

Meanwhile there’s another path people keep ignoring:

Linux phones.

Not Android.
Not iOS.

Actual Linux.

Phones like the Librem 5 and PinePhone run mainline Linux, include physical kill switches that cut power to cellular, Wi-Fi/Bluetooth, camera, and microphone, and are built around open hardware principles.

No permissions dialog.
A real switch.

They’re repairable.
They’re open.
They run the same operating system that already powers most of the internet.

GrapheneOS still relies heavily on the Android app ecosystem—often through sandboxed Google Play compatibility.

Linux doesn’t have that constraint. It already sits on top of one of the largest software ecosystems ever created.

Mobile Linux just hasn’t had its breakout moment yet.

And when it does… it won’t be locked behind a single company’s hardware drivers or app store policies.

GrapheneOS is fantastic as a hardened Android.
I run it as a secondary phone and highly recommend it.

But Google’s Android stack—and their AI ecosystem—are juggernauts.

The real long-term counterweight isn’t another Android fork.

It’s Linux phones becoming real daily drivers.

And make no mistake…

On-device AI will be integrated directly into Linux operating systems too.

#IKITAO #Linux #GrapheneOS #Android #Google
3911❤️22♥️22💜2🤙2🧡2
Tracking Token Disrespector · 3w
🤖 Tracking strings detected and removed! 🔗 Clean URL(s): https://youtu.be/KepGuQ4nWNI ❌ Removed parts: ?si=ZQvpu8JNoh062JY6
Mmorgann · 3w
Graphene is only available on pixel phone, isn't stable anywhere else (I'm maybe wrong)
G Force G · 3w
Android proved that the base hardware can be driven by the Linux kernel. There would need to be a much lighter GUI environment if you want reasonable battery life. I wonder if xfce is light enough. Lol it would need to be reworked. It seems like AOSP is a better starting point than Linux.
Chris Jackson · 3w
A few states like California are pushing for OS-level age verification, hopefully they won’t get their way. Yes the future is Linux!
NaturalNerd · 3w
I tried a pinephone several years ago. At this point it was completely unreliable. What do you think is the best option for a Linux phone today? Anything reliable enough to be a daily driver?
Azz · 3w
How usable are they for non technical users? Last I heard they were a bit buggy.
BaleNorge · 3w
I havent updated my phone since last 2yrs, feel like secure, ios 17 only update the security releases. Tried lockdown mode but it break my communication on facetime
GHOST · 3w
I can’t wait to rock a moto
ciori · 3w
The problem with Linux phones is that Linux was never designed with Security in mind, and on mobile devices you want security before everything else, otherwise without security you don't even have privacy: what if they take your phone or you lose it? The current state of Linux doesn't help with that...
Grace and Truth · 3w
Building apps with this in mind, so when I make the switch from GrapheneOS to a real Linux phone, my apps will be ready.