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by Fnoord 3446 days ago
> It's not a hugely popular opinion

Eh? On the contrary; the iPhone appears to be the most popular phone on the market. Although there is not 'one' iPhone. There is the iPhone 6, 6S, 7, 7 plus, and the small SE.

For me, I'd like a small phone which I can easily hold in one hand. One I can remain using various years. Of which I can replace the battery myself. And, where it is I who decides which software I run (ie. not a review time ran by an American corporation). Of those 4 factors, sadly only the SE covers two (since iOS will run for say 3-4 years on SE). I'm also a proponent of longevity and reducing e-waste and while I cannot replace the battery of an iPhone myself the iPhones have a relatively large resale value, which is a plus compared to a lot of Android devices.

> I still feel that Apple are standing up for user rights (e.g. FBI/government requests to make phones less secure) more than any other mobile manufacturer.

Its easier to just buy a phone from a company who can't comply with such ridiculous claims from the US government. Imagine Apple was based in Ireland. Suddenly, the claim to insert a backdoor for the FBI in every iPhone is more ridiculous.

That was one of the reasons why I bought a phone from a company based in the same country as where I live.

2 comments

> Its easier to just buy a phone from a company who can't comply with such ridiculous claims from the US government.

I think there's value in challenging the US government on these issues. It also helps set the tone in general.

Also, which non-US phone would you suggest? The only real alternative is Android. While there are various vendors, the software is almost completely written by Google. And therefore open to the possibility of a backdoor (or other) requests by the US government.

> And therefore open to the possibility of a backdoor (or other) requests by the US government.

Almost all the recent features on android phones require uploading crazy amounts of personal information to google's servers. While I had an android phone every new feature felt like a faustian bargain - "Let us store a bit more information about you and we'll make your phone better! C'mon it'll be fiiiine"

Governments don't need to touch your device when its uploading copies of everything to google's servers anyway. They can just ask google for the data directly.

And to be clear about what we're talking about, if you say yes to all the prompts (which I bet 90+% of people do) then google stores location history, audio recordings of all 'ok google' requests, email, contacts, call history, search history and a list of installed applications (so they know which 3rd parties to go after for more data). I don't know if they store SMSes, and I'm not sure what the update frequency of the location data is. But if you use google services, there's not much else for a device level backdoor to do.

Just for the record, those are google services you talk about. Android itself is open source, and doesn't do any of those things.
For practical purposes, does the difference really matter? Most consumer phones come with Google services on them. Building a usable ROM without Google services on them is not an easy task.
Not only is it an extremely easy task for someone who wants such a thing, it's already been done and is widely available pre-build for a plethora of devices with projects like LineageOS (risen from CyanogenMod), AOSP, CopperheadOS etc...
And if you choose non-Google Android, you don't get a lot of the features that make Android, Android. Google has been close sourcing huge chunks of Android over the years.
> I think there's value in challenging the US government on these issues. It also helps set the tone in general.

Sure, but a lot was and is also being decided behind the screens.

> The only real alternative is Android.

Depends on use cases. Also, there are Android derivative works.

> Also, which non-US phone would you suggest?

The Fairphone 2 allows one to run a completely open source version of Android which doesn't rely on Google [1]. But there are other alternatives as well. Jolla, for example.

> And therefore open to the possibility of a backdoor (or other) requests by the US government.

Is the software compiled deterministically?

Also, the hardware of nearly every phone is assembled in China. The chips nearly all come from China (Fairphone tried to work around it; couldn't). And therefore open to the possibility of a backdoor (or other) requests by the Chinese government.

[1] https://www.fairphone.com/en/2016/04/28/releasing-the-fairph...

For what it's worth, it's really not hard to replace a battery. Obviously not as easy as a "removable" battery, but not that hard.