"DMA's interoperability is against fundamental rights" claims Apple. The FSFE disagrees. If you also think interoperability is key for software freedom, support us!

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Free Your Android!

Liberated Android Robot

Android is a partially free operating system developed mainly by Google. Unfortunately, the drivers for most devices and most applications from the "market" are not free (as in free speech, not as in no cost). They frequently work against the interest of the users, spy on them, and sometimes cannot even be removed.

This campaign can help you to regain control of your Android device and your data. We collect information about running an Android system as free as possible and try to coordinate the efforts in this area.

Do you want a mobile device that is really yours when you buy it? Do you want a mobile device that does not spy on you and hand over your data to big corporations? Then read on!

Liberate Your Device

Learn how to liberate your device and how to regain control of your data by switching to a free Android operating system with free (as in freedom) apps. We have collected information to help you regain control.

Help Making Liberation Effortless

Liberating devices should be effortless, so that everybody can enjoy freedom. There are many ways you can help to achieve this goal, even if you don't know how to program.

Why Your Mobile Device Needs To Be Free

Mobile devices are small computers that we carry around all the time. They know our current location and contain private pictures. We use them to communicate with our friends, our family and maybe our secret love. They also provide access to the internet and have built-in cameras and microphones. Being such powerful tools, they can bring great risks to privacy, but at the same time we can achieve great things with them: it depends on who controls them.

Freedom and Control

Most mobile devices are not controlled by their users, but by the manufacturer and the operator. The software that runs on them is not Free Software. Even Android phones ship with non-free software and proprietary add-ons that often work against the interest of the user. Software updates are only made available as long as the manufacturer still has a commercial interest in your device. The applications (apps) available from the official market are commonly non-free. Nobody is allowed to study how they work and what they really do on your phone. Sometimes they just don't work exactly as you want, but oftentimes they even contain malicious features.

Running exclusively Free Software on your device puts you in full control. Even though you may not have the skills to directly exercise all of your freedoms, you will benefit from a vibrant community that can do it together.

Privacy

Our mobile devices contain more personal information than most private diaries. But proprietary systems, even most Android phones, are designed to hand over this data to companies like Google or Apple. Most users do not have full control over the personal data on their device. Convenient solutions for synchronisation and data backup trick more and more people into storing all their data on centralised servers run by some profit-driven corporation. These are usually based in the US and are required to hand your data over to the US government on mere request. Whoever has personal information about us is able to manipulate us. Therefore, non-free devices are a threat to democracy and to our society.

Privacy is one of the most important reasons to support Free Software. Proprietary add-ons like Carrier IQ spy on smartphone users without their knowledge. Many apps from the market contain malicious features. They read your private data, such as your address book, and "phone home", or they use Google Analytics to send data to Google. These are just a few examples out of many that have been discovered so far. The lack of freedom impedes independent inspection and secret spy features only become known by accident.

Most smartphones require you to connect and identify yourself to a centralised server before you can use them properly. Users have to trust the server without knowing what information is stored and how it is processed or related to other data. A phone running only Free Software does not require you to provide data to an untrustworthy company or pressure you to do so – at least this is very unlikely, as the software's actions would be obvious and the community would be able to develop an alternative version. The convenience of "value-added" services that are often coupled with such connections can be provided using Free Software as well. This keeps you in control of your personal data. Your diary remains in your possession. You can have your cake and eat it too.

Sustainability

Planned obsolescence is a serious problem that has both financial and environmental drawbacks. Every year, manufacturers produce 1.5 billion smartphones worldwide - and unfortunately, probably just as many are thrown away after what is usually a far too short hardware lifespan. E-waste increases every year. The energy required to produce the devices is extremely high, and the manufacturing and supply chain spans the globe several times. With Free Software, we address the problem by extending the hardware lifespan of phones and Android devices in particular! Learn more about software sustainability on phones and about sustainability of Free Software.

Discovering the world of Free Software

Free Software is what runs most of our digital infrastructure and our devices. The Internet heavily relies on the innovations and accessibility of Free Software. And during the last decade it also became of ever growing importance and availability on your phone.

Free Software comes with a lot of benefits. Free Software is available and can be used, studied, shared, and improved by anyone at any time. No restrictions involved. This is one of its core characteristics that in practice also helps to extend the usage lifetime of electronic devices - as outlined in our study. And Free Software is also good for your privacy. It helps you to keep control over your data. And, as you can see on this page, it also helps you to reduce e-waste and to upcycle your phone.

Liberating your devices

Installing a completely different operating system in your original Android phone is liberating and reusing your device in one. Repurposing our devices this way is a practice that modern societies should be able to practise for all devices, helping us to live more freely in a more sustainable digital society.

Remember that your phone is a general purpose computer. With the legal right and technical empowerment to install any operating system that fits, you can reuse your phone not only as a phone but also for example as a connected device in your home environment, just as in any other setting of interconnected devices. And repurposing of our devices should not only be true for phones, but for any device with Internet access. That is why the FSFE demands the right to use alternative operating systems and software on any device. This would enable us to make full use of our hardware and to repurpose and reuse our resources in a sustainable way.

Even though this campaign is about Android, there are other initiatives that make it possible to use small mobile computers with (mostly) Free Software. Due to the driver situation of mobile hardware, none of these initiatives really can run such machines in freedom. Non-free drivers and firmware are needed for many peripherals to work.

On our wiki, we collect other initiatives. Please help us to maintain this list.

Join the community or ask questions.

If you have any questions about this campaign or have questions on liberating your phone, just ask the community. Send an email to our mailing list. Everybody interested in the campaign is subscribed there and is insterested in exchanging knowledge.

For general information about our work that is not related to the "Free Your Android" campaign, please use the general contact page.

Participating Organisations

digitalcourage Associação Nacional para o Software Livre