This.
It’s weird how a particular GrapheneOS supporter keeps arguing how awful /e/ and CalyxOS are/were, and how microG is the worst thing ever. But then offers only native Google or nothing for Play Services (sandboxed mind you). The very first fallacy you learn in Cybersecurity is that if it can’t do what someone needs, it’s not secure because it’s not viable. Having nothing for Play Services is often not an option for many people. And when Google itself is one of your threat actors, literally the world’s worst solution that provides the barest modicum of protection against Google is by definition more secure.
Just allow Sandboxing MicroG as an option already for those of us with a bigger threat surface from Google than from Cellebrite-using nation-state actors.
Full disclosure: I’ve looked at using their absolutely excellent build tools to create a fork with MicroG allowed. But it turns out to be non-trivial to add the signature spoofing permission to the system and grant it to only MicroG, and conflicts with the custom Google Play config that allows Sandboxing.
Thank you for writing my thoughts into words in such a beautiful and understandable way. I’ve been trying to figure out how to say exactly this for months. As someone who was using CalyxOS until the hiatus, ive found it hard to find a proper home on any other ROM.
I’ve done something similar trying to get root on Graphene OS, since I’m more far more concerned about corporations than nation-state actors. It can be done, but isn’t worth the trouble, especially since it doesn’t completely work and GOS updates may break it. Long story short, GOS wasn’t for me.
For anyone else who might be interested in trying to root GOS, take a look here: https://github.com/schnatterer/rooted-graphene
I believe this to be likely the most comprehensive source for getting started.
Doesn’t rooting GOS feel counter intuitive? If you’re looking for security rooting GOS circumvents its security policy. May as well download some other OS at that point?
Yes, that’s right, so I did. I wanted to have a go to see what it was about, though, and I found that root was more important for me than the security that GOS purports to offer.
And when Google itself is one of your threat actors, literally the world’s worst solution that provides the barest modicum of protection against Google is by definition more secure.
This. It’s weird how a particular GrapheneOS supporter keeps arguing how awful /e/ and CalyxOS are/were, and how microG is the worst thing ever. But then offers only native Google or nothing for Play Services (sandboxed mind you). The very first fallacy you learn in Cybersecurity is that if it can’t do what someone needs, it’s not secure because it’s not viable. Having nothing for Play Services is often not an option for many people. And when Google itself is one of your threat actors, literally the world’s worst solution that provides the barest modicum of protection against Google is by definition more secure. Just allow Sandboxing MicroG as an option already for those of us with a bigger threat surface from Google than from Cellebrite-using nation-state actors.
Full disclosure: I’ve looked at using their absolutely excellent build tools to create a fork with MicroG allowed. But it turns out to be non-trivial to add the signature spoofing permission to the system and grant it to only MicroG, and conflicts with the custom Google Play config that allows Sandboxing.
Thank you for writing my thoughts into words in such a beautiful and understandable way. I’ve been trying to figure out how to say exactly this for months. As someone who was using CalyxOS until the hiatus, ive found it hard to find a proper home on any other ROM.
I’ve done something similar trying to get root on Graphene OS, since I’m more far more concerned about corporations than nation-state actors. It can be done, but isn’t worth the trouble, especially since it doesn’t completely work and GOS updates may break it. Long story short, GOS wasn’t for me.
For anyone else who might be interested in trying to root GOS, take a look here: https://github.com/schnatterer/rooted-graphene I believe this to be likely the most comprehensive source for getting started.
I replied to the wrong comment 🤐
Doesn’t rooting GOS feel counter intuitive? If you’re looking for security rooting GOS circumvents its security policy. May as well download some other OS at that point?
Yes, that’s right, so I did. I wanted to have a go to see what it was about, though, and I found that root was more important for me than the security that GOS purports to offer.
This was what I learned.