light reading but heavy means..
Sambil ngopi ngopi di weekend ini.. 😊

None of the parts that are yours will work without the parts that aren't.

The Lithuanian Defense Ministry wants you to "throw away" your Chinese
smartphone. Seriously — it advises you not to buy any smartphones made by
Chinese companies and to throw away the ones you might already own because
of the software that powers them.

This stems from research that shows how flagship phones from Xiaomi, which
are also some of the best Android phones, built for the European market,
can detect and remotely censor things like any expression of freedom for
Tibet or Taiwanese independence. Of course, this isn't all of the story. As
many of us understand, this is normal for products sold in China — even
Apple and Google bow to Chinese regulators when necessary. As we've seen
before, sometimes Western software versions from Chinese brands leave
tracking and censorship tools in place.

To be perfectly clear: We reached out to Xiaomi directly, and a company
spokesman adamantly denied actual wrongdoing regarding Xiaomi censorship:

"Xiaomi's devices do not censor communications to or from its users. Xiaomi
has never and will never restrict or block any personal behaviors of our
smartphone users, such as searching, calling, web browsing, or the use of
third-party communication software.

Xiaomi fully respects and protects the legal rights of all users. Xiaomi
complies with the European Union's General Data Protection Regulation
(GDPR)."



So you probably don't really need to toss out your new Xiaomi phone. But
this does lead to a more extensive conversation around who really owns the
product when you buy a smartphone. Hint: It's not you. Welcome to the
wonderful world of copyrights.

When you purchase a phone, you own the physical parts you can hold in your
hand. The display is yours. The chip inside is yours. The camera lenses and
sensors are yours to keep forever and ever. But none of this, not a single
piece, is worth more than its value in scrap without the parts you don't
own but are graciously allowed to use — the copyrighted software and
firmware that powers it all.

You're only leasing the software.

The companies that hold these copyrights may not care how you use the
product you paid a license for, and you don't hear a lot about them outside
of the right to repair movement. Xiaomi, like Google and all the other
copyright holders who provide the things which make a smartphone smart,
really only wants you to enjoy the product enough to buy from them the next
time you purchase a smart device. Xiaomi pissing off people who buy its
smartphones isn't a good way to get those same people to buy another or buy
a fitness band or robot vacuum cleaner.

When you set up a new phone, you agree with these copyright holders that
you'll use the software on their terms. You also agree that the copyrighted
works are subject to being altered anytime, but not by you — we call those
updates.



This is a good thing and a bad thing. Every creator deserves to profit from
their work, and if an amicable agreement between you and them can be made,
then everything is good. The not-so-good part (usually) arises when the
company that does own everything has ideas about improvements that you
don't agree with. That's when heavy-handed ways of monitoring your photos
can happen. Or when software could make sure you don't post pro-Democracy
in China content to social media.

But it isn't going to change any time soon. For many of us, it's not even a
concern because it has very little effect on the day-to-day use we get from
our phones. But maybe it should. Maybe, even if you aren't concerned about
censorship or that "big tech" can monitor the photos you upload and
download, you should want a revamp of the situation. Phones aren't cheap.
We should demand a little more.

Read full article at
https://www.androidcentral.com/you-dont-really-own-your-phone

-- 
===========
Ayo Subscribe >>  Channel YouTube
https://www.youtube.com/user/komunitasandroid

----------------------
Kontak Admin: 
IG   https://www.instagram.com/agushamonangan

-----------------------
FB Groups     :  https://www.facebook.com/groups/android.or.id

Aturan Umum  ID-ANDROID >> goo.gl/mL1mBT

==========
--- 
Anda menerima pesan ini karena Anda berlangganan grup "[id-android] Indonesian 
Android Community" dari Google Grup.
Untuk berhenti berlangganan dan berhenti menerima email dari grup ini, kirim 
email ke id-android+unsubscr...@googlegroups.com.
Untuk melihat diskusi ini di web, kunjungi 
https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/id-android/CAB6d%2Bc51iDcPNCFG--BtQWb1W%2BB%3DGmR_y17u_UvBr4b1B1Sr8w%40mail.gmail.com.

Kirim email ke