Much advice around Android security is just "Buy a Nexus", which is great if you can afford (a) to buy one and (b) replace it every 2 years
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Replying to @mjg59
We can't restrict meaningful device security to the well-off. It's not just people with money who are targeted by criminals or authorities.
2 replies 33 retweets 24 likes -
Replying to @mjg59
Manhattan project for building a $50 phone with secure hardware, user controlled signing keys and security updates for 4 years
4 replies 52 retweets 74 likes -
Replying to @mjg59
@mjg59@FrozenFire Problem with lots of low-end price aims: the only selling point is security. Will avg user buy a phone with crap screen?3 replies 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @RichFelker
@mjg59@FrozenFire I think you could aim for 50-75% price of a current low-end iPhone, high-end presentation, and still get mass adoption.1 reply 0 retweets 0 likes -
Replying to @RichFelker
@RichFelker@FrozenFire I'm not saying we *only* need a low-end device, just that ignoring the bottom end of the market hurts people1 reply 0 retweets 1 like -
Replying to @mjg59
@mjg59@FrozenFire I agree, but I doubt you could reach significant low-end market share without _also_ being attractive in other aspects.1 reply 1 retweet 1 like
@mjg59 @FrozenFire That seems doable to me at maybe $100 but not $50. Remember you don't have preinstalled malware subsidizing you. :-P
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