@PublicNuisance@fosstodon.org
I'm really sorry. i think i wrote something that's too ambiguos there.
So let me phrase some things differently.
> My pinephone...
... Android allows.
Good for you!
Lets assume that your device are indeed fully encrypted. But wouldn't that get decypted everytime you input your password?
Well sorry to dissapoint you.
But
Android does that too ever since the treble update
Unless you unlock your bootloader ofc.
Saying android is not private is kinda mocking some people who try their best to fight google effort to f-up android even more.
When there's definitely some great dev working on /e/ , Lineage OS, graphene os, Xprivacy Lua, etc.
Judging by your proposed argument that "android aren't private".
Then boasting about your "device encryption".
I think your definition of "private" is a bit irrelevant.
I'm not talking specifically about "device encryption".
Since on it's own it could be useless. (decrypted everyboot?)
I'm talking about whole encryption thing in general.
Like "internet traffic encryption", "messages encryption", etc