this post was submitted on 22 Oct 2025
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Very true and agree GrapheneOS is awesome and a very good thing they are doing with that partnership. Europe can partner with GrapheneOS as well since you mentioned them.
Security and privacy are both fundamental and even though they are behind compared to GrapheneOS it does not mean we can't catch up. Alternatives are a part of life whether it is picking where to live, what/where to buy, what to buy for ingredients to make food, etc. The use case is they want to use open source already for sovereignty and long-term they will be just as good as GrapheneOS in long-term.
Yet we cannot rely on just 1 egg we need a whole nest of them so any of them can have a chance of succeeding. The ones in post mentioned don't have an oem manufacturer partnered with yet either
Europe can't, nor will partner with Graphene OS because 1) Graphene OS likely won't exist in 5 years with android becoming more and more closed, and 2) Graphene OS is still forced to use:
I applaud your initiative and enthusiasm, but there are significantly more hurdles than simply convincing the EU to partner with a few companies.
If you are serious about this, start looking at projects Steam is supporting (like Proton) and figure put how we can get more developer time into existing Linux phone solutions.
Will for sure do the last part to support Proton, and developer time in those Linux phone solutions they have covered. Just trying to figure out the new hardware too so we are not locked out fully from new tech
Great points non so no worries! Aren't they partnering with a new OEM though? But I guess that would probably still have the same problem
Thinking to put together a website of what people have suggested in various posts to develop this initiative more overtime in various ways. Any other problems you can think of?