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Are There Any Smartphones That Respect Privacy?

An anonymous reader writes "After many years I am finally considering entering the smartphone era. Within the mainstream, there seem to be four OS choices: Windows, Android, Blackberry, or iOS: Android comes out as clear winner to me. However, all of the choices in one way or another require sharing a lot of personal information in the Cloud run by their respective corporations. Let alone Blackberry's centralized mail servers; there is no way to have an Android smartphone working decently without sharing all of your contacts, calendar appointments, and other stuff with Google. While Android is less intrusive than iOS, the lack of privacy remains quite annoying no matter how comfortable it is to have your own calendar and contacts centralized. In 2011 is there any option, other than living in a cave, to keep one's own life private while enjoying the wonders of modern smartphone apps?"

6 of 478 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    As is running CyanogenMod on a rooted Android phone.

  2. Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution by hawguy · · Score: 5, Informative

    And I'm serious. While not as versatile towards own-hosted solutions as the old Windows Mobiles, it's still light years beyond Android and iOS. You can easily use your own Exchange server to sync and share your contacts, calendar and other stuff, which gives you true privacy.

    Is it really that easy to set up your own Exchange server? Does everyone around here keep a Windows server in a coloc somewhere so they can run Exchange?

    The reason for this is simple too. Microsoft may be many things, but they have always respected privacy.

    Really? Always?

    http://grep.law.harvard.edu/articles/02/08/08/0923231.shtml
    http://www.networkworld.com/community/blog/users-outraged-over-windows-live-privacy-violations
    http://arstechnica.com/microsoft/news/2010/02/microsft-investigates-hotmail-privacy-breach.ars

    And that's just what I found in a quick google search.

  3. About BlackBerry's "centralized mail server" by thirty-seven · · Score: 5, Informative

    In spite of that, email communication and web communication is encrypted/decrypted on the BlackBerry smartphone itself, so RIM (the company that does BlackBerry) can't snoop into your data contents even if they wanted to. That's why some authoritarian countries around the world couldn't quite understand - they demanded RIM hand over the secret keys to let them read any message contents, which they just assumed RIM must have, even though they don't. Similarly, with the riots in Britain earlier this year, the authorities complained that the rioters were co-ordinating using BlackBerry phones, and they couldn't intercept those communications. To me, that's a strong recommendation for a BlackBerry if you want security and privacy.

    --

    Atheism is a religion to the same extent that not collecting stamps is a hobby.

  4. Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution by wvmarle · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most of the security bashing is related to drive-by installs and related security holes, where software gets installed without user interaction. And the ease of which installed software can escalate its own permissions, and the hardness of running Windows as non-privileged user.

  5. Re:Windows Phone 7 is a good solution by digitalchinky · · Score: 5, Informative

    Although I prefer Maemo since it seems to be the least soul sucking OS around, Android is also quite nice once you install a few odds and ends to clean up the advertising mess - though you need hardware that can be rooted. Applications like DroidGuard, AdAway, LBE Privacy Guard, or similar will put a halt to anything trying call home or get in your way.

  6. Re:Sure it is ...... by Alunral · · Score: 5, Informative

    Last I checked, Cyanogenmod was made by Cyanogen and his crew. Cyanogen is employed by Samsung. All of them are well known in multiple places. They are most certainly not "anonymous hackers", you tool.