this post was submitted on 03 Jul 2026
65 points (100.0% liked)
Privacy
5868 readers
7 users here now
Welcome! This is a community for all those who are interested in protecting their privacy.
Rules
PS: Don't be a smartass and try to game the system, we'll know if you're breaking the rules when we see it!
- Be civil and no prejudice
- Don't promote big-tech software
- No apathy and defeatism for privacy (i.e. "They already have my data, why bother?")
- No reposting of news that was already posted
- No crypto, blockchain, NFTs
- No Xitter links (if absolutely necessary, use xcancel)
Related communities:
Some of these are only vaguely related, but great communities.
- !opensource@programming.dev
- !selfhosting@slrpnk.net / !selfhosted@lemmy.world
- !piracy@lemmy.dbzer0.com
- !drm@lemmy.dbzer0.com
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
@tom GrapheneOS must be fuming rn
It is unreal how angry the gos dev gets at competition.
I've never heard of CalyxOS before, what are the differences to Graphene?
The main difference is that GrapheneOS focuses on hardened security (sandboxed Google Play Services, their own browser Vanadium, etc.) and only runs on Pixels, CalyxOS stays closer to stock AOSP, prioritizes privacy with things like microG as a Google services replacement and supports more devices like the Fairphone and some Motorolas
@WitchKnight AFAICT CalyxOS is similar to LineageOS, the defunct DivestOS and so on, basically only modifying 'surface-level' things to improve privacy and security by editing the Android OS, but no significant modifications to the kernel.
GrapheneOS can go deeper and create their own, more secure memory allocator, they can integrate things better via the kernel since GOS is only available for Google Pixel devices, which means they can provide the most security on those devices.
CalyxOS is still secure, it's basically the same as AOSP, which already has a good security model (being the official Android source code and all), and they try to minimize what data gets sent to Google, and trying to spoof what they have to share with them.
GOS goes a step further, they don't include GMS by default, and they have developed a custom integration which lets you install Google Play Services as user applications (as opposed to system-level), which means GMS cannot access some data, and is basically sandboxed within the user-mode limits. They also forked Chromium (as Vanadium) and also modified it to integrate with the kernel-level improvements such as the hardened memory allocator (malloc).
Of course, people will go out of their way to say that CalyxOS actually weakens the security because they can't keep up with the frequent security updates to upstream AOSP, which may be true, but they have recently retuened from a hiatus, promising new features and more updates, which remains to be seen if they can keep up.
---
There have been debates about what's what between CalyxOS and GOS for probably years, I don't really keep up with shitty drama, but at least on a subjective level to me it seems Daniel is quite the asshole to other people that aren't fully aligned (or neutral) to GOS.
They dried retracting the rights to the browser patches used by Cromite, but that didn't work because that's not how code licenses work, for the simple reason that someone from the CalyxOS project created a pull request on GitHub. Created a pull request!
It didn't even get merged since there wasn't much to see, but for the sole reason that the PR was made and Cromite's developer had a few comments, Daniel barged in and caused a scene. The GOS account regularly gets into arguments with people on Fedi, they block anyone that's even slightly opposed or critical of them.
---
Sure, the code is great and I probably would use GOS if I could afford a Pixel device, but it comes with the stink carried by Daniel's drama. If there was a comparable project to GOS, I'd use that instead.
There's also this "objective" comparison page: https://eylenburg.github.io/android/_comparison.htm, but do note that Daniel lurks and comments on the github PRs and issues of this site.
Can be installed on more than just Pixels. Uses microG instead of sandboxing.
Danny boy will have an opinion, that's for certain.
To be fair I've used both and I get the complaints aimed at each philosophy. At some point, I'm just grateful these projects exist at all and for free. Personally I still think microG is nice to have, flaws and all. My Motorola lasts four days on one charge and I have a gut feeling that not having Play Services constantly running is part of why. Either way you're better off than stock