With respect to "smart" phones, it can be reasonably claimed that we don't 
control our lives.

At the hardware level, the baseband (radio) computer in almost all cases has 
access to RAM, thus access to your passwords and keys for any open wallet or 
encrypted filesystem, etc.

Notwithstanding, we owe it to ourselves to run an operating system which at 
least does not deny to us, our right to install and run any software of our 
choosing.

The average Android and iOS Apple phone, is a strict walled garden into which 
only authorised software may be installed.

Software "Apps" which are not authorised (or have been banned) by either Google 
or Apple respectively, are not available in the respective "Play Store".

This is abhorrent, a centralisation of power, a blatant censorship vector, 
financially burdensome to those of meagre means, and fundamentally unethical in 
principle wrt the suppression of the basic rights of the end user (refer to 
Richard Stallman's GNU General Public License for details of fundamental human 
rights in relation to software/ apps/ computing).


Totally random scenario/ example:

Some rando punk decides Tor needs improvement, and works diligently for zero 
pay and little gratitude to bring say (random examples) chaff and UDP transport 
layer features to Tor.

After horrific bugs and even worse security problems in the code are identified 
/ repaired by tragically paranoid other punks, NeoTor takes off, thwarting the 
deep state's end to end onion route monitoring network, and so an urgent order 
is made upon Google to cease and decist from distributing such nefarious 
software.

Google of course complies immediately, and almost all users go back to using 
old Tor.


The stranglehold Google and Apple have on not only limiting the average user to 
approved software only, but to enforce total transparency upon all developers 
to idetify themselves with 100 points of ID just to TEST their software, and to 
pay some fiats for the priviledge whilst they're at it, is ... a little less 
than satisfactory.

Having experienced the pain of an Android phone, even after unlocking still 
being locked into the garden and offered only "Google" or "XiaoMi" when saving 
every contact (and never "local storage only"), and the pain of finding and 
installing a rooted OS (_how_ many dozen options? I _still_ have to choose 
Google or XiaoMi if I want to backup my contact list? there's really _no_ easy 
option to just dump it to my laptop with an ad hoc wireless?)

... it is evident I would be MORE than happy to pay $50 to make this pain go 
away by having someone at my local computer club back up my address book and 
install Debian on my phone.

What we need is Debian on the phone.

And we need this to be super easy for the average geek to install, and 
thousands of average geeks need to start getting these donations to install 
Debian on Android phones.  Given how painful it is for someone supposedly 
"technically literate", this ought be a fantastic business opportunity.


So Debian on mobile phones? It's possible.

What is needed is a geek-able process whereby the "CyanogenMod" mobile phone 
operating systems are split into an absolute minimal "bootloader + kernel + 
drivers etc" for a specific device, and the operating system is a separate 
install on top of that, and for those who care, Debian as the OS.


https://wiki.debian.org/Mobile

http://www.tinkerphones.org/

https://lists.goldelico.com/mailman/listinfo.cgi/community

https://lists.debian.org/debian-mobile/

https://lists.debian.org/debian-embedded/

https://lists.debian.org/debian-arm/

https://alioth-lists.debian.net/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/android-tools-devel

https://wiki.debian.org/DebianOnHandhelds

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