Are there steps I can take now to prepare for this possibility? Alternatives like Windows and Android are also American-based, and even Linux has strong ties to the US. What options do I have to ensure access to my devices and data during such an event?
I’d appreciate any advice or strategies for preparing for this kind of situation.
Back up all of your iCloud(it can be exported). Keep a copy on hand, and keep a copy encrypted in the cloud using something like BackBlaze.
Even though Linux has strong ties to the US, some of the distros aren't wouldn't be completely restricted (I'd wager most of them), and aren't all fully US-based. Keep a copy of Asahi / whatever flavor can run on your Mac handy on a bootable USB stick.
You could grab a cheap android phone as a backup to your current iPhone and flash it with a fork, like Graphene.
The general data protection and backup strategies largely apply and work well for this scenario.
Essentially, start freezing US dependencies out of your tech stack and take control:
- Run Linux on your machines
- Run GrapheneOS on your mobile
- Select services from this list: https://european-alternatives.eu/
- Keep local and off-line copies of your important data, and maintain frequent backups
- Block companies that comply willingly with unfair practices at your network edge (e.g. with a Pi-hole for DNS-based blocking, and you get ad blocking in addition)
Debian – France, Germany, Switzerland Ubuntu – United Kingdom Linux Mint – Ireland Manjaro – Germany, Austria, France openSUSE – Germany Zorin OS – Ireland elementary OS – Denmark Kali Linux – Switzerland (formerly Germany) Tails – France Endless OS – Portugal
You can go Canadian: Gentoo Linux – Canada ParrotOS – Canada (initially developed in Italy, but has contributors in Canada) Redcore Linux – Canada LiteOS – Canada
Stay away from these: Red Hat Enterprise Linux (RHEL) – USA Fedora – USA CentOS (Discontinued, replaced by CentOS Stream) – USA Rocky Linux – USA AlmaLinux – USA Arch Linux – USA Slackware – USA Pop!_OS – USA Clear Linux – USA Tiny Core Linux – USA
But in case it does happen, I think Apple is the least of your trouble. I would just stock everything into a hard-disk and store it somewhere underground.
Linux foundation is based in US but I'm sure Europe has enough talented developers to maintain their own branches.
But your digital life is more than just photos. If there is hostility to everything that is US based, then everything made or hosted by US based companies may be compromised in ways that you may not predict now. Apple, Google, Facebook, Amazon, Microsoft, etc may have to comply with government orders, whatever they are.
Linux may be safer from that, you have Suse Linux if you want something supported locally.
Chill out. That's not feasible. Europe lacks the military capability to sustain such a war.
Germany is still trying to figure out who was behind the Nord Stream II explosion, isn’t it? Considering that the German elite and political class have already sabotaged their own economy to please the Democrats, why would they behave any differently now? The real turning point came when Germany chose to align with the U.S. in the Ukraine conflict. The tragic irony is that despite the elites sacrificing everything for Washington, the new administration now seeks to push them out entirely and replace them with an outsider nazi Party - the AfD.
It’s wild how nothing went Germany’s way, but given what they did to Greece a decade ago… well, there’s a certain irony in how it all unfolded.
unlike other operating systems, it's trivial to not have a cloud account on linux. And if you think it will pull some autoupdates from USA you can disable automatic updates with a single command as well.
So far every service I use has a way to download my data. I have been backing them up 4 times a year for several years now. Obviously big stuff which won't change needs to be handled differently to active stuff.
Dropbox is headquartered in the US and is subject to US law, and interpretations thereof.
Dropbox has a history of taking on US government bureaucrats for roles in the company, including members of the US Intelligence Community[2].
If any of these clash with your threat model, look elsewhere? Syncthing[3] might be your thing.
1. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dropbox#Privacy_and_security_c...
2. No link, because someone "sterilized" Dropbox's Wikipedia article of those particular controversies.
3. https://syncthing.net/
http://collapseos.org/ https://duskos.org/