Considering de-Googling? Unplugged just relaunched its privacy-first smartphone, and it earns “zero revenue from customer usage”

News Room

In the age social media, cookies, government surveillance, and digital footprints, it’s easy to just accept a loss of privacy as part and parcel of existing online – it seems you can’t even set up a new smartphone without accepting some level of data sharing, unless you want to miss out on essential and useful features.

US-based phone maker Unplugged wants to change that – the company has relaunched the UP Phone, its flagship (and only) model, built from the ground up to offer as much privacy as possible in its hardware and software.

To begin with, UP Phone runs on UnpluggedOS, derived from the Android Open Source Project, but does not come with Google Mobile Services. This means the phone shares no data with Google as standard, but misses out on some popular apps like Google Maps.

The phone is, however, extremely resilient against data requests from third parties – Unplugged shared that an independent test found that in a 45-minute testing period, the UP phone sent and received no data packets to trackers, while a Samsung Galaxy S25 logged more than 170,000 exchanges and an iPhone 16 Pro more than 210,000.

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