Breaking Up With Big G! One App at a Time
I recently posted on LinkedIn about how American companies have absolute access to our data. No smoke screens. No “just metadata”. Everything. And I protested loudly. What’s mine is mine. Full stop.
The response was good, but one comment hit harder than the rest:
“What phone do you use?”
Touché.
Because the truth is, those of us who want to live without constant data harvesting have a problem. If you want a smartphone today, in 99 percent of cases you have two choices: iOS or Android. The rest are tiny islands in a sea of Apple and Google.
There are alternatives. Like the Jolla C2. And yes, I will probably switch to one in the future. But right now I’m on a Pixel. Google’s own hardware. A work phone, which I also use privately. No chance to jailbreak (due to company policy), privately you can take a look at GrapheneOS .

I know a lot of people are in the same situation. The phone is great. Google’s apps are great. I’m not against the services themselves. It’s the system behind them I can’t accept. The laws that allow reading my data whenever they want, without asking me or a Swedish court.
So. If you can’t pull the plug all at once, what do you do? You start unplugging one cable at a time. Replacing app by app. Service by service. Until one day you realise you don’t actually need Google anymore.
Here’s my list so far
Gmail and Outlook: self hosted Mailcow (guide coming)
Google Calendar: self hosted Mailcow (guide coming)
Google Drive: Jollacloud (Private, what I'm using) / Elastx Swift Storage / Elastx Vault (Archive) - (What i recommend for Business)
Google Photos: self hosted Immich (guide coming)
Phone/Images Backup: Jollacloud (Private, what I'm using) / Elastx Swift Storage / Elastx Vault (Archive) - (What i recommend for Business)
Microsoft OneDrive: Jollacloud (Private, what I'm using) / Elastx Swift Storage / Elastx Vault (Archive) - (What i recommend for Business)
Google Authenticator: Aegis
Google Keyboard: Heliboard
Google Maps: OsmAnd (works surprisingly well as a car navigator)
Office, Google Docs, Canva: LibreOffice (PC) and Cryptpad
Google Keep: Standard Notes
Google Play Store: Droid-ify and Aurora Store
Google Chrome: Ecosia Browser (Android)
Google Password Manager: Bitwarden (self hosted Vaultwarden, guide coming)
Google Calculator: Fossify Calculator
YouTube: NewPipe
Some of these changes actually made things better. Aegis, for example, is –> in my opinion <– miles ahead of Google Authenticator. It even gives you a little vibration when a code is about to expire, making it easier to keep track. Others were a step down. As impressed as I was with OsmAnd, it’s still not quite as good as Google Maps. But it’s good enough. And that’s the trade-off, if you go down this road, you have to be ready to compromise.
This isn’t a sprint. It’s a marathon. Slow, stubborn steps forward. And every time I replace a Google thing with something I control, on my terms, it feels like a small revolt.
I’m not there yet. But I’m on my way. And I think more people should start walking.
Me. The apps. And one less reason for Google to know what’s for dinner.
Edit! - Såg just denna!

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