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Cake day: August 2nd, 2024

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  • Problem being I don’t know how that would work, especially since banks would probably hate freedom respecting systems.

    Yeah, that’s the thing, I don’t think it’s possible without becoming as evil as the alternative. If it is, I’m all for it. But my freedom comes first.

    Australia will lose cash over time. All first world countries will. You can’t stop “progress”. It’s just a matter of how long, and then how long until you are not a citizen without Google play on your phone. Or considered disabled, which is already happening.


  • I’ll be honest that I don’t know how it works because I never cared. What I know is that it doesn’t work with root or most roms, it removes my freedom because my phone can’t be “trusted”, so any other issue it has is not important. Even if it was more private than cash. It needs Google to “trust” my phone and I really, seriously trust a thief more than Google.

    Cards are another massive issue but it’s a problem so widespread that there’s nothing I can do about it anymore. I use cash whenever I can but I know humanity and it will die soon because people don’t care.

    And later tap to pay will be mandatory and if you don’t have spyware (Google play, apple) on your phone you can’t buy anything anymore.

    The present is bad, the future is horrible.


  • That’s interesting to see the opinion of a chromium user. And nice thing you checked about the google connections. This is a good thing to know as that was worrying me.

    After using it for a while as a main browser I did find a bunch of bugs. Mainly that often I can’t go back to the previous page at all and some stuff like images on manga websites are downloading way slower than on firefox, I don’t know why. It’s not the browser being slow, it’s the download being slow.

    I figured I’ll wait until it’s more stable. It could be my phone because I have issues with Firefox too. But if the only way to report bugs is a microsoft account I’ll leave it to other people.


  • guismo@aussie.zonetoLinux@lemmy.mlThe state of Linux phones in 2025
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    6 days ago

    Not that I own all these, but what do they have to do with my phone? I don’t see any connection to those except where I wanted to create it.

    I’m not stopping you from wanting your apple/Linux phone. Or anyone from making it. I’m just saying that I believe that my interests are similar to a lot of people who care about open source, and therefore:

    -The people who care about open source will not support that enough to be successfull (currently, as more people keep saying stuff like “I just can’t live without this convenience” it might change).

    -The people who care about those conveniences that much don’t care about open source, privacy or freedom, and they won’t support it either. They will only support it if it’s even more convenient and lazy, and for that the apple/Linux phone would have to be even more evil than the current options.

    So in my mind it’s a dead end, and I personally I don’t support it. But go for it! And I do believe that over times those conveniences will be seen more and more as needs and soon we might have a Linux phone I wouldn’t want to use. But good for those who want it.

    BUT just to be clear, I desperately want a Linux phone, yes! But my concerns are stuff like: does the hardware work well? does the camera work well? Does the GPS work well? What about signal with the telecoms? Battery lifre? You know, mostly hardware related with the software.

    Tap to pay, car play, siri, all those things can be on the list, but way down on the bottom.


  • guismo@aussie.zonetoLinux@lemmy.mlThe state of Linux phones in 2025
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    6 days ago

    That’s a bit extreme. Some of those are not linked.

    Yes you can not have cloud pictures without having to trust the server. But you can have an open source, inspected system that uses gps without any related data being shared. Gps doesn’t send data, it’s the system choice to create a way to send it to someone. You can have a Linux phone that doesn’t chose to do that.

    You can have convenience with privacy, but the companies offering those services don’t want that, nor do the consumers care.

    And those consumers would not care about a Linux phone.


  • guismo@aussie.zonetoLinux@lemmy.mlThe state of Linux phones in 2025
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    6 days ago

    It’s not the existence of the option. It’s the requirements it brings.

    Which companies will this phone need to shake hands for that to work? What price will they have to pay? What risks does it bring to my privacy on that phone? What requirements will they have? Banks, car companies, credit card companies etc are not the kind of company I want to see involved in my system.

    If magically you can have those agreements without any risk for me, then I’m happy with it. But it’s impossible. You want a different product than mine with those needs.

    I need freedom and trust in my system and I would like convenience. You need convenience and would like freedom and trust. It’s a matter of how much you have to sacrifice of one to get the other. It’s a personal choice.

    For example, even before Android shitified itself, tap to pay wouldn’t work if you have root or most custom roms. Is it the price I have to pay for your option? Limit how I can use my phone so that Banks can trust it? Imagine if I couldn’t use sudo on Linux because someone wants to bend over to a bank?

    I would look for a different system.


  • guismo@aussie.zonetoLinux@lemmy.mlThe state of Linux phones in 2025
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    6 days ago

    Or, touch wood, using cash!

    Imagine the horror. Something that can even work if there’s no internet at all, like the cave man used…

    Or, sarcasm aside, besides working properly offline, it doesn’t give money to evil companies like visa. Then with the phone there’s yet another evil company profiting from you. And giving people the idea that it’s impossible to live without doing so.

    It’s a little extra convenience for those who like it, sure, but it’s crazy to say they can’t live without it.


  • guismo@aussie.zonetoLinux@lemmy.mlThe state of Linux phones in 2025
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    6 days ago

    That’s the problem. The things you think “people” need is what they already have and it can’t be different. “I want to trust everything on a company online but I want my data to be private and safe.” You have to choose. For those people who think they “need” what you say, they already have apple and Google.

    Just like Linux was never meant to replicate windows “features” like cortana and others, and it didn’t, and it works for those who don’t want those things which is why they want Linux.

    The requirements for Linux to have your “needs” would make me not want it, and then it would just be a poor version of apple without the trillions of dollars that come with it. It wouldn’t please either side.

    The things open source people care will always be a minority. It’s sad but it’s the reality.