Once again, the buy #European is trending. What are your favorite European brands? 🇪🇺

In our latest guide, we take a look at the best European products you can use 👉️ tuta.com/blog/boycott-us-choos…

#BuyEuropean #PrivacyFirst #GDPR #DigitalSovereignty #PrivacyTech

in reply to Tuta

As long as it is open-source and the business model does not contradict, it does not really matter where the team is located that develops the code:

Therefore, GrapheneOS is a (I might say, the only) viable alternative mobile operating system. /e/OS' security standards seem to be lacking in some regards while SailfishOS, to my knowledge, is not open source.

My pain point still is the dependency on Google Pixel phones due to hardware requirements. I had hopes for @fairphone working towards this, but it seems it has currently (if at all) no priorioty.

in reply to Tuta

your competitor Proton is also a good alternative. Punkt is the best alternative to iOS and degoogled android. Incidentally Punkt also supports Proton by default.

What the EU needs is an equivalent to Apple Health / Google Fit, which integrates with Oura, Polar, Suunto, Withings, Yazio, Awareapp etc. etc.

Can they all cooperate to form this cloud data storage, protected by EU privacy, supported by subscription?

in reply to Tuta

You're recommending people use phones and operating systems without basic privacy and security patches/protections while claiming those are good for privacy. Fairphone, Murena and Jolla are not safe options. To promote their products, both Murena and Jolla heavily mislead people with inaccurate claims about what they provide and about multiple more private/secure options. People buying their products don't get crucial patches but are led to believe they do...

discuss.grapheneos.org/d/24134…

in reply to Tuta

I think you mix things up like I also see with the digital Independence Day #diday

Do we want more privacy/security or do we want to get non US products. This may often go hand in hand but not always.
If we focus on European products, gmx is a viable option. From a privacy point of view, not so much.
Your article is mainly focused around European products, hence no signal, I suppose, but you also state:

“sich für europäische Produkte zu entscheiden - wenn es um Big Tech-Alternativen geht ist der wichtigste der bessere Schutz der Privatsphäre!”
You mix privacy with European or assume every European is more private which is not true. Most privacy focused people e.g. recommend signal, which you dont, because US, I guess. This is confusing