The choice does exist, but it gets harder and harder to go without a phone
Many jobs expect us to be available at all hours. Younger generations cannot navigate without maps. Phones are also the primary way we record/observe ICE. They’re also our calendar/organizer, notebook, and many other things
Sure, we can have an independent GPS, camera, calendar, and notepad, but the barrier keeps getting higher
We need to develop counter measures, and long-term pass strong laws banning this level of government surveillance
JensSpahnpasta@feddit.org 3 days ago
Does it? It was possible a while ago, but in the last years, we saw train tickets going to apps. There is no ticket machine at my local stop. There are areas where you can only park your car with an app. I need 2FA to get into my accounts. So going to protests or just living your life without a phone is getting harder
relianceschool@lemmy.world 3 days ago
I lived without a cell phone for about 3 years (2022-2025), and once in a while there was a small hurdle but overall it was surprisingly easy. 2FA can be done via text/email, I never ran into an instance where I needed an app. Every ticket I bought could be printed at home, so it takes a little more forethought but not a deal breaker.
These days I own a phone per request of one of my business clients, but it stays turned off at home unless I’m on a job. Once in a while I’ll break it out to use the GPS but most places I drive to I can find by memory. There are many “middle” ground solutions out there too (like Graphene OS), but as a general rule, I would make a habit of leaving your phone at home when you can, and definitely when engaging in anything spicy.
Lucelu2@lemmy.zip 2 days ago
Yes, and printed maps still work. Keeping an address/phone book still works (so do sharpies on your arm).
dejected_warp_core@lemmy.world 3 days ago
This is a bigger problem than most realize. Consider the barrier-to-entry for phones, internet access, and charging. Then add cashless payment on top of that. Combined, it creates a new red-line between economic classes, and a rather ugly one at that. At some point, this mode of commerce is going to get selected not for the convenience it provides, but for whom it excludes.
I’ll also add that getting access to a smartphone with total anonymity is impressively hard to do.