The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

🎄🎁 Christmas Giveaway: Tuta is giving away a 🇩🇪 German-made Volla Phone by @volla

The Quintus, worth €719, is a Google-free smartphone built for freedom, simplicity & security. 🔒

✨ VollaOS (with multi-boot option) or Ubuntu Touch
📱 6.7” AMOLED display
📸 50 MP triple camera
💾 8 GB RAM | 256 GB storage
🚀 Powerful Mediatek Dimensity 7050 8-core processor

⚡ For a chance to win, just comment what is most important for you on a #deGoogle phone? ⚡

#Privacy #DigitalFreedom #Giveaway #VollaPhone

reshared this

in reply to Tuta

Well, it certainly doesn't include the exorbitant price of the device, just because "privacy is paramount." Seriously! Someone there really went totally crazy with those prices! What's so expensive about the phone that it's so jaw-droppingly expensive overall? The Swarovski-encrusted, gold-plated casing? These phones are not so wonderful that they should charge customers such prices for them. Dear creators, come down to earth. Otherwise, a dog with a lame leg won't buy this.🤦‍♀️🤦‍♀️

@volla

in reply to Tuta

For me the most important on a google phone is to have an access to application which allows me to stay financialy connected to the world, so I mean 3 things

1) BankApp (Pekao)
2) NFC payments
3) Stock APP (XTB)

If I will have those, I don't care about anything else. My phone is my connection to my finances. I would love also a cooperation with a cybersecurity company so I can pay them to protect my phone better as I do for my iPhone

in reply to Tuta

Being frank, for me this is more a global issue rather than a personal security concern. What a #deGoogle device brings is a choice to stop feeding even more the unstoppable oligopoly that reigns the world supremme without any other opossition that the equaly obnoxious Chinese statal conglomerate. We need to stop feeding the monster. More players, from all over the world must come in. We need to bring competition back to the ever more crucial technological sector.
This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Tuta

Security. It's a daily driver, I need it to be virtually and physically secure against common threats.

Usability & reliability. If I need to make a call or send a text, use a map, or access my 2FA codes, it should work fine and correctly.

Repairability. If something breaks or stops working by any means, it would be an incredebly sweet comfort to know that I can just order a new piece and fix it my self:)

This entry was edited (1 month ago)
in reply to Tuta

I would say "google-free" but as it's already pretty explicit in this case, I'm going for repairability.

See, with Android phones your phone turns into a paperweight as soon as it stops receiving Android updates anyway, but otoh if you have an open source OS which you can expect* to be supported way longer, repairability becomes essential.

*for example, linux dropped 486 support some 20 years after the last 486 was manufactured
@volla

in reply to Tuta

in reply to Tuta

What matters most? That my phone is truly MINE. Not a surveillance terminal disguised as a smart assistant. I want to open an app without wondering 'who else is watching?', search without feeding endless ad profiles, use a device that works FOR me, not ON me. Digital freedom can't be a luxury in 2026 – it's a right. And it starts with truly controlling your own tools.
BTW I use Tuta 😉
in reply to Tuta

Control and privacy.

I don't want someone else deciding what apps are installed on my phone, or what I can or can't uninstall. I want to be able to install what I want, without being corralled into a gatekept environment or something that steals everything I write or tracks what I look up and uses it to promote other things.

A nice camera is also good. Memories that aren't fuzzy when looking back at them is preferable.

in reply to Tuta

Integrity.
I so much enjoyed the times when the latest gadgets would simply introduce new features and services that would actually enhance people’s lives. They weren’t designed to spy on you, to undermine your privacy, to influence your thinking and doing. I want full control of what I share and with whom if anything at all. No other entity should ever make that decision for me, let alone secretly in my name.
in reply to Tuta

❝ what is most important for you on a #deGoogle phone? ❞

ROOT.

i need to know no FAANG apps are hiding in root as “system” software.

here in USA, Samsung & LG been in cahoots with FAANG, Qualcomm and telcos, partitioning root to hide their stalkware. they openly conspire to make it impossible to root USA & Canada phones running Snapdragon & Knox.

a properly degoogled phone works as the computer it is. i should be able to reformat with any AOS.

so give me root access.

@Tutanota @volla

in reply to Tuta

Apart from the obvious, avoiding monopoly, people privacy and keeping the internet an open place, I think what's the most important on a de-googled phone is to be able to maintain the level of security we deserve. We shouldn't have to give-up hardware security and regular security update to avoid google services. Google made sure we were dependent enough to make it hard. So big thanks for every alternative company for providing alternative safe solutions !
in reply to Antti

@Antti98 SailfishOS has very poor privacy and atrocious security. Unlike the open source Android Open Source Project, SailfishOS is largely closed source. It brings the insecurity of desktop operating systems to mobile like Ubuntu Touch but without being open source. Both still depend on Android code. Jolla was also very closely tied to the Russian government and worked with them long after the invasion of Crimea while they were heavily sanctioned. Quite a sketchy company.
in reply to Oliver

The next best option for privacy and security is definitely and iPhone 17. They provide much stronger privacy from apps/services than nearly all other operating systems. That includes a rare focus on providing privacy from themselves with end-to-end encryption and local processing of data. For example, /e/ sends user data to OpenAI without consent for speech-to-text while Apple does that locally with on-device processing. We're of course implementing the local processing approach.
in reply to Tuta

The media in this post is not displayed to visitors. To view it, please go to the original post.

( not in priority / any particular order )
1. Hardware camera and mic disable switch.
2. Tactile camera on / off switch.
2. Removable battery.
3. Assembled sans slave labour, in a democratic open country.
4. Extensive .apk support ( including old versions ).
5. Fully customizable keyboard. ( as on screenshot )
6. Firewall, vpn and app internet access control.
7. Fine control over all app permissions ( including system processes ).
This entry was edited (1 month ago)