They don’t recommand it because if bought today you won’t have much support in the comming years. So if you are already on Pixel 6 Pro you can install GOS it’s just that once Google stop supporting it Graphene will do the same.


https://hydralauncher.gg/ has a native Linux client. I never tried it and haven’t pirated a game in a decade so I cannot share any experience. But my guess would be that if the game runs on Proton or Wine, the cracked version should to.
I tend to agree but it still remove more google blobs from its codebase.


The mafia that welcomed all the refiugees from T411. I am also pretty happy that this tracker is out of business in such a disasterous way. They had no principles and were greedy asf. I hope the best for the french speaking torrent community and the p2p empire.


Most of the time I use MarkDown and export as PDF, if I need more complex layouts I’ll use Libre Office


There is an easy by-pass, simply modify a config file. Guide here: https://rentry.co/Prism4Free


This is a DE not a distro, System76’s distro is named Pop_OS!
The thing that they don’t show a code Licence in their comparison is a bit off. It’s proprietary software comparing to FOSS or Open Source competitor without any mention to this… But maybe it’s decent.
It runs like shit, at least when I tried it. Never heard of Continuwuity, will looks into it thanks.
Yeah Keet (and Pear in general) are doing some open washing, branding their apps as open source while using very restrictive licences, at least that’s how I feel about them. It’s closer to source available to my eyes.
While I agree to avoid using Sandboxed GMS I strongly disagree with do NOT use statement.
My main profile doesn’t have them, I get some proprietary apps through AuroraStore which grabs the APKs directly from Google Play Store without using my Google account and most of the time it works (Aurora Store is a bit buggy at time).
There is some apps that I can’t use without Play Services or if they are not installed from Play Store itself (FUCK DRMs!). For them I have setup a user profile with the Sandboxed Play Services, it stopped when I leave the profile and let me use these apps that I NEED more than absolute privacy or anonymity.
I strongly recommend to anyone to try using GrapheneOS without them, especially if you’re already into multiple FOSS apps. The Plexus app could help you identify which apps would cause issues for you without the Google shit. Then if needed for some apps with no alternative that suits you, setting up either a seperated user profile or, if it’s too unconveniant for you, a Private Space with the Sansboxed Play Store and Services installed. And if these two are still not conveninant for you just install them on your main profile, that sucks but that’s the sad reality of Android. As stated by the GrapheneOS Team it will still be way better than stock Google OS or any other manufacturer flavour of Android.
Not everybody have the same threat model and using GrapheneOS will improve your security, privacy and control over your device even with these proprietary background services from Google. Maybe for your threat model (or ideaology) you shouldn’t use them but that doesn’t mean everybody should do the same. Privacy shouldn’t be all or nothing, it’s about power and control over your personal informations, and GrapheneOS is a wonderful tool to take back some of that from your phone, having Sandboxed Play Store is okay even if not desired and you can choose how you want it thus having control and power over them.


A website called The Pirate Bay with nothing to pay doesn’t look the official way to acquire or watch the last Disney movie to me.
Maybe memoria but I don’t think it support e2ee. However it is a self-hosted solution which is more private than a unecrypted SaaS with tons of telemetry.
That is the distinction between Open Source and Free (as in Freedom) Software. I prefer the spanish/latin/french term Libre to refer to what you call “truly open source”.
Open source is indeed frequently used by big and smaller companies to do what I call OpenWashing. Yes the source code is available somewhere but the licence is so restrictive that it doesn’t respect my freedom and thus isn’t Libreware / Free Software.
Also copyleft for the win!


It’s less resilient, honestly with today speeds it is not that less efficient I would say.


It depends on your local laws I think. I’m pretty sure downloading free copyrighted product from an unauthorized source is still illegal in France for exemple.
Use IronFox (forked from DivestOS Mull Browser) if you want a private FOSS firefox-based browser on Android. Note that it still lacks per-site isolation like every other FF based browser on Android, but this seems to be the most harden option available.