this post was submitted on 07 May 2026
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https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2025/10/leaker-reveals-which-pixels-are-vulnerable-to-cellebrite-phone-hacking/
Literally proven that GrapheneOS is the best at preventing Cellebrite from accessing phones.
Not everyone is in a position to run Graphene.
Not everyone interacting with ICE (or other authoritarian government functionaries) has the same threat model.
CalyxOS coming back is an unmitigated Good Thing.
In the event they abandon again, they're leaving even more users vulnerable. The only thing CalyxOS has over AOSP is the removal of the Google Play Store... in exchange for microG, which runs with elevated permissions as well. Ignoring that, as I said in my comment above the one you're replying to, a third of the supported devices are GrapheneOS compatible. The other two thirds are covered by LineageOS, which imo is just as secure as CalyxOS (probably even more secure than Calyx given they abandoned their community for about 10 months).
It is a strange moment to criticize Calyx for 'abandoning their community'. Actually they didn't abandon their community, they just paused (and announced it to change to another OS in the meantime) for personal restructuring.