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Joined 1 year ago
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Cake day: June 18th, 2023

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  • I hadn’t heard of this, and it makes me quite angry. Sooo many phones have Qualcomm chips in them, including every phone I’ve ever owned.

    The amount of data they’re collecting is unreasonable for what’s actually required for A-GPS (the only actual feature this enables). And it’s all completely invisible to users because they don’t even include the Privacy Policy with the phones.

    If I want to stop Qualcomm sending out a bunch of my data unencrypted over the web, I’ve got very few options, all of which are: Buy a new Phone…

    Edit: After more research on this, it seems this A-GPS request is still happening from the OS, which controls Wifi. /e/OS just didn’t reconfigure the Qualcomm driver like GrapheneOS. This isn’t a hardware or firmware backdoor or something like I thought initially. The article seems like an ad for NitroKey / NitroPhone, which is just a modified Pixel with GrapheneOS on it. I might look at GrapheneOS for my Samsung phone.



  • You seem to have a different remembered version of history. They very first iPhone had Wifi, and could do loads of things other devices couldn’t, like play video, browse the web using a real full browser, and IMO way better typing than any physical keyboard.

    You’re acting like iPhone’s lack of an App store on day one put it at a disadvantage, but there weren’t exactly a lot of other options. The app store was released only a year later, and you could do loads from the browser before that.