▲ | fsflover 2 days ago | |||||||
I have no idea where you managed to find any feelings in my replies, and I will ignore the personal attacks. The linked security-related arguments aren't reasonable at all. They talk about improving users' security but instead the actual result is less security for the majority of people, due to (1) the high price of the supported hardware, (2) reliance on Google hardware not trusted by many users (https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45101524). | ||||||||
▲ | scheeseman486 2 days ago | parent [-] | |||||||
> I have no idea where you managed to find any feelings in my replies, and I will ignore the personal attacks. Your username is fsflover and your posts clearly have an ideological bias that favours purely open source solutions even if it goes against reason. > The linked security-related arguments aren't reasonable at all. They talk about improving users' security but instead the actual result is less security for the majority of people, due to (1) the high price of the supported hardware, (2) reliance on Google hardware not trusted by many users All SoCs are a black box and all of them are made by untrustable companies that are likely already working with the security services of whatever country they're R&D'd or manufactured in. There is no good solution to this, so they picked the best worst option. Nonetheless, most of the evidence that is available shows that GrapheneOS on Pixels are the most secure phones currently available. So, clearly not security theatre, whereas if they also supported phones that didn't even let you lock the bootloader it absolutely would be. GrapheneOS isn't to blame for every other phone manufacturer dropping the ball. | ||||||||
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