Stories like this one from are not unusual:
arstechnica.com/information-te
That's why Purism takes the digital supply chain so seriously. Read about our efforts to protect the digital supply chain here:
puri.sm/posts/protecti
Conversation
This is a company making a fork of open source code and including a backdoor in it. These aren't Google Android devices. How exactly do you prevent someone doing the same with any of your projects? You don't, and as usual you're misleading people with your dishonest approach.
2
8
The headline and article on Ars is a little bit misleading but that's not what I was talking about. I'm talking about Purism repeatedly attacking iOS and Android by being misleading and even outright dishonest, especially when what they're offering is much worse at these things.
2
1
An iPhone is an all around better choice and will remain that way, and they seem totally uninterested in actually doing the work to make a product offering more privacy and security rather than just marketing it as such and misleading people. It's incredibly harmful to users.
1
1
It's increasingly clear that it's about branding and marketing, not substance. What they care about is bringing Debian, systemd, GNOME, etc. to mobile not privacy and security. In reality, they'll be delivering a device with substantially worse hardware and OS privacy / security.
1
I don't want a response from them. I'd just prefer it if they stopped posting so many attacks and corrected the huge amount of misleading and inaccurate information they've published. They should try to compete something like an iPhone on merit instead of innuendo / dishonesty.
I've complained about it multiple times before, and nothing ever came of it. If companies and individuals want to be trusted, I think they should start by being consistently honest and representing their own products and competing products fairly and accurately. Just my opinion.
1
Show replies



