tell me you don't understand open source software without telling me...
and phones have lots of attention on them, you have to actually show evidence.
not just generic "privacy is impossible" fud
tell me you don't understand open source software without telling me...
and phones have lots of attention on them, you have to actually show evidence.
not just generic "privacy is impossible" fud
One of my professional titles at some time was "Chief Expert for Open Source" for a very, very large company, so a few people tend to think I know a few things.
Nobody here will check the AOSP source code. Look at the malware injected on NPM packages that was exposed this week: it went for a long time without being noticed. You won't check either the code for that suspicious distro, so all we are left is "trust".
I won't go further to try convincing you of my perspective and I don't really care enough to look into their code to find vulnerabilities which would only be downplayed after exposed.
The red flags are there (compromised hardware, suspicious funding). My time is better used supporting alternatives without such red flags.
Is it really worth to promote (for free) such dodgy projects?