>What is Librem?
Librem is a series of phones and laptops which respect your privacy.
>What is the phone in the OP image?
That is the Librem 5. A GNU/Linux Phone coming in 2018.
>Where can I purchase this?
puri.sm
/Librem/
Other urls found in this thread:
libreboot.org
twitter.com
>phones
>respect your privacy
kek
I'm a developer of Nemo Mobile (Side project of Sailfish and Nokia N9's Meego), the team behind Librem is pretty great, we've been in talks for them to support us and they're very receptive
it lets you turn off the microphone and camera with a killswitch, is free and open source software, and has no backboor.
I believe everything else can be corebooted
On Leo he said maybe they wont have a GSM radio in it by default. That's pretty hardcore security.
I want an Arch phone, but I'm poor.
>connects to cell towers and GPS
>people think there's privacy on any phone
kek
you can permanently turn it off if you want
Lack of software will kill it. Just like ubuntu, sailfish and others.
>generic android phone
>gappless aosp
>50$ at unauthorized service center for removing gsm antenna
Dont reinvent the wheel
Would buy but too expensive.
yeah just like you can turn off the windows botnet :^)
yes just replace the software
or just dont buy shit products that pretend to be 'privacy focused' purely to exploit consumers :)
This shit looks just like android Eclair. Looking at everything shows an absolute mess of design language.
Plus this chart is absolutely horrendous. Please change the language of it.
Of course the "user controls the device" on every OS, almost every phone has something as vague as "layered security protection". And it might be a good idea to list stuff that it actually has in common with other OS's as that is what people want to know with an unfamiliar piece of software. This isn't a fork of android with privacy features, this is a completely new OS, so people will want to know what makes it similar to other phones as well.
Plus the whole "everything the other has is a no" makes it a bad chart.
And good point.
They're trying to pressure intel to give them a clean ME source. Trying. Until they actually get anything fucking done it's probly not worth it.
>doesnt mention ram
>doesn't mention storage
>doesn't mention battery
>has set price
Wtf are we paying for
Just get a lg v20 and slap in a 10 900mah battery with lineageos
>safe
>respects your privacy
>virus free
>Linux
When will this meme end?
3GB RAM, 32 GB + removable storage.
Battery is removable, not sure about the capacity.
I'm just quoting this from memory, I read that yesterday. You should probably just open the page and read that shit.
>Lack of software will kill it. Just like ubuntu, sailfish and others.
Just give me a Telegram client and i'll be happy
it's the only modern hardware capable of corebooting iirc
it's literally right there. Stop posting this
The software on this phone is completely open, so people that keep insisting it "won't be supported" and die like Ubuntu/Firefox's attempts aren't even looking at what the goals of the Librem are.
If you like Android, you can install Android. If you like real Linux, you can install real Linux, with a mobile-oriented desktop manager (by definition, this would have as many apps as Linux has on day 1).
You can probably even go as far as to dualboot between different operating systems. On top of this, the baseband isn't coupled to the CPU, and can be physically disconnected via a kill-switch. PureOS's mobile dialer/messaging app will also use Matrix by default for end-to-end encrypted chats and as the default for outgoing calls.
All software enhancements to make Linux desktop managers more mobile friendly would be open source as well. It could even be argued the project is more about making modern, real Linux run on a small screen form factor.
>that fsb honeypot
Why even bother?
>You can probably even go as far as to dualboot between different operating systems
my dick
s/Linux/GNU\/Linux/g
notify me again when they use zen