Home » Technology » No new operating system: FSF’s LibrePhone project wants to liberate Android

No new operating system: FSF’s LibrePhone project wants to liberate Android

by Rachel Kim – Technology Editor

The Free Software Foundation (FSF) has launched the LibrePhone project, an⁣ aspiring multi-year ​effort to create a fully free software-based​ smartphone by reverse-engineering and legally reimplementing proprietary components of ⁣existing Android devices. ​The project aims to eliminate reliance on binary blobs ‍- ​pre-compiled software often containing proprietary code – and ⁣offer ‍users complete control over their mobile experience.

while not​ developing a new operating system, ⁤the FSF intends ​to‍ “liberate” Android by recreating essential ⁤functionalities currently locked behind proprietary code. Lead developer Rob Savoye will begin with radio ‍functions (cellular, ‍Wi-Fi, Bluetooth), followed by GPU and touchscreen implementations, meticulously analyzing existing software to build original, legally distinct replacements. This approach ⁢avoids copyright infringement⁢ by focusing on functional ​equivalence rather than direct code​ replication.

The FSF acknowledges this is a long-term‍ undertaking, requiring ample financial support and volunteer contributions. Savoye​ expressed optimism, noting the project builds upon existing open-source ‌work, stating, “Developing⁣ completely free software for a modern commercial phone will not be ⁤swift, easy or cheap, but our project‍ benefits from standing on the⁣ shoulders of giants who have already⁤ done most of the work.” The project’s success would offer a privacy-focused,⁢ user-controlled‍ option in a mobile market ‍dominated⁢ by⁤ proprietary systems.

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