this post was submitted on 02 Oct 2025
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Privacy
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I can't speak for everyone, but if I'm using a dumb phone, I'm not going to be doing any of the things that I'm worried about them hearing.
If ICE grabs my phone right now and beats me until I lock it. They're going to be looking through my lemmy history.
I'm not going to hold a long political dissertation over SMS or during a phone call.
What I really want to at this point is a pager, a cellular Wi-Fi access point, and an 8" tablet that can run Linux and sip power so I can just pretend I don't have a device.
This is basically what I was thinking. Where can I find a fully functioning 8" Linux Tablet? I feel like the rest of it is easy peasy.
Edit: In my head, I am imagining a steam deck but with the side controller bits snapped off. Someone pls make this. lol
Okay, it's no steam deck, but the GPD-4 6xxx model looks like it supports Linux reasonably well.
https://gpdstore.net/blog/gpd-pocket-4-review/
https://github.com/aarron-lee/gpd-win-tricks?tab=readme-ov-file#disable-fp-sensor-6800u-untested-on-newer-win-4-models
It's an 8.8 inch 180 degree touchscreen and it has a keyboard built in.
It's a pricey sausage, but not more expensive than my flagship phone.
That is very interesting indeed, thank you for bringing it up!
Pine64 has something I think. I don't know if it's any good though.
I've mostly just heard they are a little under-spec'd in general, so performance is not great.
I keep hoping the Halium project will pick up support for some small tablet, but those are almost all bootloader-locked. I don't love Halium, but anything is better than what we have, I could deal with some UBPorts.
I even looked at DIY. There's no lack of 7" touchscreens, but Pi's are apparently bad on power. There are a couple of mini clone boards that might work, but they all have tradeoffs and red flags.
I feel like every time Halium comes up it comes with qualifying statements (like "I don't love Halium"). I don't really know enough about it to know why that is. What are the problems with Halium that people don't like? Is it what it does (or how it does it) that is the problem, or something else about the project?
I think the main problem is, that it solves a problem, that shouldn't exist in the first place. If OEMs would build (and ideally also upstream) proper drivers, then we wouldn't need a translation layer
The primary problem we have with putting Linux on phones is a lack of drivers. Hallium is basically fishing bits and pieces out of AOSP, then feeding that data into the Linux install. The upside is that we get pretty good power management and we get working cameras and working radios and all those creature comforts you really expect a phone to have.
The downside is that Google (and nearly every hardware manufacturer) is rather aggressively heading towards locking third parties and out of things. It's not hard to envision a world where a couple of back room deals are made and some firmware updates happen. And all of a sudden, hardware that is at any updates is not capable of running Halium.
Halium's core system partition is also read-only, so there's some lack of hacking ability there that we'd really like to see. You have to put the custom stuff you want into a separate container. Not impassable, though.
Halium is at the very least private and works fine right now. Will it continue to work? Once the eye of Sauron hits it, will it survive? Will it be sued into submission? Will it be sabotaged by Google or the hardware manufacturers?
It might very well be the crutch we need for now. But it also makes sense to get the hell off of it as soon as we can.
GrapheneOs Duress Pin is what you are looking for in your described scenario i think
That's a good way to get locked up for 6 months while they 'investigate' you
What are you trying to hide RUMBA??? Ihre Papiere bitte
there are cases out there of people being detained for years for not providing the unlock pin/passwords to encrypted data.
yup, I want no parts of that.
Here's my license, here's my phone. here's my travel laptop.
I just stopped traveling altogether