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Jolla's Sailfish OS Now Certified as Russian Government's First 'Android Alternative' (techcrunch.com) 98

The future for one of the few remaining alternative mobile OS platforms, Jolla's Sailfish OS, looks to be taking clearer shape. Today the Finnish company which develops and maintains the core code, with the aim of licensing it to others, announced Sailfish has achieved domestic certification in Russia for government and corporate use. TechCrunch adds:In recent years the Russian government has made moves to encourage the development of alternatives to the duopoly of US-dominated smartphone platforms, Android and Apple's iOS -- flagging Sailfish as one possibility, along with Tizen. Although Sailfish looks to have won out as the preferred Android alternative for Russia at this point. The government has said it wants to radically reduce its reliance on foreign mobile OSes -- to 50 per cent by 2025 vs the 95 per cent of the market garnered by Android and iOS in 2015. Sailfish's local certification in Russia also follows an announcement earlier this year that a new Russian company, Open Mobile Platform (OMP), had licensed the OS with the intention of developing a custom version of the platform for use in the domestic market. So, in other words, a Russian, strategic 'Android alternative' is currently being built on Sailfish.
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Jolla's Sailfish OS Now Certified as Russian Government's First 'Android Alternative'

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  • by geek ( 5680 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2016 @03:50PM (#53387973)

    Android is shit. Complete and total garbage. You're either stuck with insecure software with it or stuck with Google spyware.

    iOS is at least secure but you're stuck in a walled fucking garden with Apple spying on you instead.

    Just give me something with the apps I want, without the spying and with security updates, please for the love of God.

    • "Money for nothin' and your chicks for free". Free shit is rarely (never?) free. Mobile platforms are the credit/debit cards of the current generation.
    • by pr0t0 ( 216378 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2016 @04:00PM (#53388073)

      I think the problem is that the spying IS the business model. No one is manufacturing phones, creating mobile operating systems, or providing cellular service simply to sell those things at some dollar amount above cost for profit. They do that too to be sure, but the end game is to track, aggregate, and catalog every thing about you that they can and sell THAT information to advertisers...and maybe the government(?).

      So we get to be the consumer and the product, which works out pretty well for everyone on the other side of the equation; just not us.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You're begging for the wrong thing.

      What you really want is well-documented, open hardware that anyone can program; then you'll automatically get all the choices you want. That's what gave us the PC revolution, and that's what will give us the actual mobile revolution, which has unfortunately not yet occurred.

    • Android is shit. Complete and total garbage. You're either stuck with insecure software with it or stuck with Google spyware.

      iOS is at least secure but you're stuck in a walled fucking garden with Apple spying on you instead.

      Just give me something with the apps I want, without the spying and with security updates, please for the love of God.

      No way this will ever happen.

      It's far too late to even try and dismiss the free model and pay for the privacy you desire today. Your data will still be sold off for profit regardless of what you're promised (fines for doing so are soooo fucking worth it), or your data will be hacked outright.

      Yeah, I get your point. There should be no data to sell or hack, but it's still way too valuable, and the larger the consumer base, the more value it retains. Our global population isn't exactly shrinking, and on top

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Yes recall what the US brands did under PRISM:
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
    • Sailfish's local certification in Russia also follows an announcement earlier this year that a new Russian company, Open Mobile Platform (OMP), had licensed the OS with the intention of developing a custom version of the platform for use in the domestic market.

      Translation: In Putin Russia, OMP-modified OS watch you!

    • Android is shit. Complete and total garbage.

      I still prefer it to Apple's walled garden, and actually enjoy using my Android devices. Having said that, it's a pretty dangerous situation right now that there is no true independent and open source alternative. It's like the world of Mac OS and Windows from 10 years ago, except without Linux of BSD alternatives.

    • by wjcofkc ( 964165 )
      BB 10 was and is still awesome. That and you could sideload most otherwise unavailable Android apps. I still swap my sim card over to my classic on a regular basis. There was the whole Canada thing... but hey.
  • by The-Ixian ( 168184 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2016 @03:52PM (#53387997)

    If adoption of the OS comes even close to 50% in Russia, wouldn't that mean that it would be a viable (as in lots of apps) OS for the rest of the world? I like the idea of a 3rd real contender in the market.

    • If adoption of the OS comes even close to 50% in Russia, wouldn't that mean that it would be a viable (as in lots of apps) OS for the rest of the world?

      It would be for countries closely allied to Russia:

      Iran, Lybia, etc.

      I'm not counting China because China already has its own Android custom version.

    • If adoption of the OS comes even close to 50% in Russia, wouldn't that mean that it would be a viable (as in lots of apps) OS for the rest of the world?

      Not a foggy chance in hell of getting any share at all in Russia, or anywhere else, with the current license issues.

    • Re:Cool (Score:4, Informative)

      by williamyf ( 227051 ) on Tuesday November 29, 2016 @08:19PM (#53389695)

      SailFish* (Unlike bada) can run Android APPs in a sort of compatibility mode. It can also be coaxed to load many of Google Play Services (but that breaks Google's EULA). So, most likely, very few people will develop native sailfish, even in Russia.

      If Anything, this creates critical mass for affordable/Quality phones running the OS. Just imagine, say, a MODERN YottaPhone running Sailfish.

      Having said that, carriers have demonstrated that they do not realy care for a Third ecosystem, all they really need is the "Threat" of a third ecosystem to restrain Google a tad.

      * Also BB10 OS, but that is a whole different issue.

      • by r0kk3rz ( 825106 )

        SailFish* (Unlike bada) can run Android APPs in a sort of compatibility mode. It can also be coaxed to load many of Google Play Services (but that breaks Google's EULA). So, most likely, very few people will develop native sailfish, even in Russia.

        If Anything, this creates critical mass for affordable/Quality phones running the OS. Just imagine, say, a MODERN YottaPhone running Sailfish.

        Having said that, carriers have demonstrated that they do not realy care for a Third ecosystem, all they really need is the "Threat" of a third ecosystem to restrain Google a tad.

        * Also BB10 OS, but that is a whole different issue.

        Alien-Dalvik isn't really a 'compatibility mode' its a full Dalvik engine, just like you'd find on Android.

        A Sailfish Yotta phone port was created for the Russian Communications Minister as a trial, but I think Yotta are running into trouble so we may never see a consumer device.

        The best part about all of this, is the pioneering work that Jolla has released open source, is enabling players such as Plasma-Mobile, Ubuntu Touch, Open WebOS, and Asteroid OS to run on Android devices, and potentially gaining a f

      • From the Jolla forums, and also the discussions on the Fairphone forums (as the Fairphone 2 does support Jolla Sailfish OS as an alternative to Android), I understand that the machine that allowed android apks to run inside Jolla in their earlier phone hardware is not any more present in the current v2 of the OS.
        Now, maybe they managed to convince the former (independent) developers of the said machine to join again, or maybe this happened very recently.
        Or this announcement will motivate them :-)
        An entrypoi

        • by r0kk3rz ( 825106 )

          From the Jolla forums, and also the discussions on the Fairphone forums (as the Fairphone 2 does support Jolla Sailfish OS as an alternative to Android), I understand that the machine that allowed android apks to run inside Jolla in their earlier phone hardware is not any more present in the current v2 of the OS.

          That's not quite correct. Alien-Dalvik is present in SFOS v2 but its not an open component, and as such its only available on bought sailfish devices. Fairphone 2 is a community port, and as doesn't include things which require purchased licences

  • "...Sailfish has achieved domestic certification in Russia for government and corporate use."

    One can only imagine what this would entail with regards to State-sponsored backdoors.

    (Not that the US has much room to talk...)

    • Re: (Score:1, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      At least we'll have a choice on what government is watching us.

    • Today the Finnish company which develops and maintains the core code

      Try reading next time.

      • Ain't OMP a Russian company, that will, among other things, localize the OS to Russian requirements? Which would include being compliant w/ Kremlin requirements

  • Hopefully with this certification Jolla will have no more excuses to delay repayment of the suckers that backed it's tablet kickstarter.
  • Russia wants to get away from foreign mobile operating systems but Sailfish is maintained by a Finnish company. If I were Finland, I'd be a little worried right now!

    • But OMP has licensed Sailfish, and so have the rights to make whatever changes they need to it, right?
    • Next year we will celebrate 100 years of independence from the Russian empire. So basically we are still a grand duchy.

    • We already are.
    • Don't worry. Russia's invasion force will be defeated by the Finnish Olympic cross-country skiing team, just like it happened in the winter war.

  • Back in the day, when i travelled regularly to Russia, I would take a handful of blackberrys activated with western SIMS and secure emails; sold them as a nice sideline. Not to organised crime, but to middle-class friends who were active in pro-democracy groups or were just concerned about their privacy. Was "tribal knowledge" (I thought it paranoid at the time, but turns out was true, there but also in Saudi and India) that BB - who had built their reputation on security - had sold out to the Govt. Fore

  • Would be nice if they had a device available in the US that ran it, but they have personal vendettas to settle.

    • Nexus 5.

      • No keyboard.

        • So they hate America because Google made a phone with no keyboard?

          What?

          • No, they hate the US for making a phone that is a deliberate PITA to import.

            • Newsflash -- they don't make phones any more.

              You asked for a Sailfish phone available in the US -- I said Nexus 5, you whined that it had no keyboard.

              Newsflash -- neither did the Jolla one. (Yes, I know about the keyboard TOH, that's not a Jolla product).

              Why was the Jolla one not available in the US? Because the US uses weird frequency bands that the SOC they used didn't support. Blame the FCC, not Jolla.

              You seem to have a very strong sense of entitlement.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    You can run Sailfish OS on many different phones and tablets. If you do a little tweaking ...

    Mobile devices supporting installation of Sailfish OS [blogspot.com.ee]

  • and the browser is locked down garbage. I have it on my new Samsung TV and am seriously considering buying another Roku to use instead (because while that's also locked down at least it works reliably).

Keep up the good work! But please don't ask me to help.

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