this post was submitted on 26 Jan 2026
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Privacy

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Im stuck with an s23 for a while yet. Is it even worth the trouble of trying to use f droid, shutting off google play services and disabling all the other shit on my phone, when at its core its all spyware?

I really wish an alternative existed that wasn't just a prototype or $1000.

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[–] monovergent@lemmy.ml 14 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Worth it, especially if you are stuck with the phone. Find FOSS equivalents of the built-in utilities (gallery, files, etc.), disable what you can with uad-ng, block the apps that can't be disable from network access using Rethink DNS, and use the websites of services on a computer instead of apps whenever possible.

It's still far from what privacy ROMs can do for you, but until you can get a GrapheneOS, etc. friendly phone, taking some action is much better than just letting the spyware run wild.

[–] bridgeenjoyer@sh.itjust.works 2 points 2 days ago (1 children)

Yep ive been doing some of these!

One issue is personalDNSfilter blocks mullvad so i cant use both at once. Not sure why. Still confused on all the networking terms everyone throws around because theyre so ambiguous. I really dont get what dns is even though ive read the definition a hundred times.

[–] monovergent@lemmy.ml 2 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

Sorry if this analogy has already been thrown at you dozens of times, I like to think of DNS like an address book for the internet. On a traditional phone, I can't just type in someone's name, I have to type in a number. Without DNS, the internet would be like that, accessing any website would require recalling and typing in the IP address. But DNS translates domain names (hence Domain Name System), the part of the URL leading up to .com, .ml, etc, into the proper IP addresses for you.

Unless you self-host, the DNS service is hosted on someone else's server, and many devices default to communicating with the DNS server in plain text. Which is why you want to trust your DNS provider since they can keep a list of which sites you visit. And DNS over HTTPS mitigates the possibility of interception by encrypting your DNS requests.