this post was submitted on 04 May 2026
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Those prices. Ouch.
If you don't want to pay a wild premium, you have to contend with a device that is built by Google... and running an OS that is mostly built by Google.
The forks are great and all, but dependency on Google can't be the solution to the problem forever.
There's not really a reason to be upset with a phone running a privacy focused version of Android. Android, at heart, is Linux with some runtime stuff on top. The runtime stuff has open source versions that Google is involved with, but its still open source. There's also independent reimplementations of some of the proprietary Google stuff.
The thing is, there's really only 2 mobile platforms with any sort of application support: iOS and Android. iOS will probably never have open source versions. If you go outside those 2 platforms, you end up being very limited. You can talk to Amazon, Mozilla, Canonical, Microsoft, Palm, BlackBerry, and others about what that world looks like. So, if you want to have any application support and therefore any traction, the best bet is to take something that's already mostly open source, reimplement the non open source bits, and make sure what's left doesn't depend on Google (though most have a way to use Google services, often is a restricted way, if you need that). That's what /e/OS and GrapheneOS do.