Tesla...certainly isn't top of mind when I think about makers of technology products that permit true ownership of the hardware / respect their users' privacy.
A phone made by a car manufacturer that abuses access to car cameras to spy on customers in their homes and share videos of them being naked? You can't even pay me to make me use such crap.
Unfortunately, "reasonable" generally means "can do the things typically done with smartphones these days", which include things like banking, media streaming, and civic stuff - things mediated by the very systems whose vendors aren't just embracing remote attestation, but actually driving its proliferation.
For better or worse[0], this is not a technical problem - it's a social/political one. Technology created it, by making remote attestation possible - but the actual problem is with why companies want to use it.
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[0] - Definitely worse. Technical problems are easy.
For people looking for a new phone it could be either Jolla [0] or Fairphone 6 [1]. Both come with their own OS.
[0] https://jolla-devices.com/sailfish_devices/
[1] https://shop.fairphone.com/de/the-fairphone-gen-6-e-operatin...
Fairphone os _is_ android...
Yes, you're correct. With Fairphone 6 and eOS they completely degoogled, tho - at least that's the claim.
You got me. None.
I do wish ubports + waydroid would be a reasonable alternative -- but it's wishful thinking.
My only hope is Tesla bringing out a phone with it's own OS at some point.
Tesla...certainly isn't top of mind when I think about makers of technology products that permit true ownership of the hardware / respect their users' privacy.
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A phone made by a car manufacturer that abuses access to car cameras to spy on customers in their homes and share videos of them being naked? You can't even pay me to make me use such crap.
https://www.reuters.com/technology/tesla-workers-shared-sens...
https://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/tesla-work...
GNU/Linux phones.
Name three?
Unfortunately, "reasonable" generally means "can do the things typically done with smartphones these days", which include things like banking, media streaming, and civic stuff - things mediated by the very systems whose vendors aren't just embracing remote attestation, but actually driving its proliferation.
For better or worse[0], this is not a technical problem - it's a social/political one. Technology created it, by making remote attestation possible - but the actual problem is with why companies want to use it.
--
[0] - Definitely worse. Technical problems are easy.
Maybe you need two phones then, one for the civic stuff and the other for private communication.
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> Name three?
Openmoko, Pinephone, Librem 5
Are there any that aren't laughably insecure? No? Oh well.
According to which threat model?