this post was submitted on 19 Jul 2021
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Privacy
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Yes, I agree, but Android is sufficiently secure as Google has incentives (now even more with grifter Apple blocking others' spying to allow just theirs) to make more and more users get trapped in Google's ecosystem, plus the development is open source, due to which zero days are extremely costlier to find on Android than for iOS: https://www.wired.com/story/android-zero-day-more-than-ios-zerodium/. This also shows us closed source obscure security model failed with Apple, and even for Windows.
Also, Android is a lot easier to be able to exercise control on and lockdown, and use trusted FOSS software on.
Moreover, if you are doing mission critical work like dissent, journalism, whistleblowing and so on, phones should exclusively be used as communication tools and to click photos and so on. I have covered this in my Activist and Protestors Handbook: https://lemmy.ml/post/34220
One should definitely try and use Linux based distribution, tweaked for your own security needs, for as much work as possible in such cases.
I am having trouble with creating my Linux Hardening Guide currently, which I definitely want to try completing in its entirety like I did the Smartphone Hardening Guide. This is essential because no such guide for Linux exists that is as easy, digestible and considers a lot of things that all current guides lack. And I definitely would love to intertwine it with a new version of the Activists and Protestors Handbook.