▲ | wolvesechoes 5 days ago | |
> If the source is fully open (it is) than detecting and disabling backdoors is completely possible There exists a possible world where a group of underpaid FOSS devs forked Chromium and AOSP and effectively developed it further. But it is not our world. > the GrapheneOS team could simply continue development of AOSP on their own. They won't be able to do so. | ||
▲ | neodymiumphish 4 days ago | parent | next [-] | |
Which makes the idea that a group like them could build their own OS from scratch all the more unattainable... That's the point I'm trying to make. At least if Google ever drops AOSP, it would be when it's still an intact OS available to continue development on. Additionally, I suspect a group like Graphene could get a lot more support developing AOSP's replacement in that instance, considering how many other manufacturers and devices utilize AOSP-derived software. | ||
▲ | phendrenad2 2 days ago | parent | prev [-] | |
What makes AOSP so much more complex than open-source frameworks like Gtk and KDE? Or even partially-funded software like Gnome? |