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by tranq_cassowary
194 days ago
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GrapheneOS doesnt really proactively attack GNU/Linux. What happens is that there are posts on the internet about GrapheneOS or mentioning GrapheneOS in which or under which completely wrong comparisons between GrapheneOS and GNU/Linux get posted. It makes sense that you care to clarify or correct if you spot people are talking about your project and are (intentionally or unintentionally) spreading wrong information about it by making comparisons based on misconceptions or falsehoods. The thing you link about restricting network traffic doesnt make much sense. GrapheneOS has a proper network permission which other OSes dont have. The outbound traffic restrictions to certain destinations which are being referred to are just a bad approach. You can send the traffic to one server and just process it there and send out to other servers. You also say : > Also, if I explicitly don't trust Google with anything, GOS is extraordinarily insecure for me until a new vendor If thats the case, dont opt for GNU/Linux either given the large code contributions made by Google. Also avoid any software built with LLVM, written in Go, written in Flutter, using Angular, ... The two "problems" you link arent really huge security issues. How is GrapheneOS having access to the embargoed patches and being able to ship them a security issue? Also the planned sideloading restrictions dont even apply to GrapheneOS. It would only apply to certified OS that license Google Mobile Services. Also, that isnt even a security issue. Its a freedom issue. |
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Can you be more specific here? I don't see anything like that in my links.
> dont opt for GNU/Linux either given the large code contributions made by Google
You're trolling again, with no reasonable arguments. You can find a reply here: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46176660
> How is GrapheneOS having access to the embargoed patches and being able to ship them a security issue?
This is not the actual issue. The actual issue is that existing patches for a known vulnerability become unavailable, because Google decided so, making GOS potentially insecure. Patches without the source code shouldn't be trusted.
> It would only apply to certified OS that license Google Mobile Services.
Until Google alters the deal.
> Also, that isnt even a security issue. Its a freedom issue.
There is no security without freedom. If you're protected by a steel door, but you don't have the key, you aren't safe: You're imprisoned. You can't protect yourself from Google without having freedom to run what you want on "your" device.