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This Finnish Privacy-focused Linux Phone Wants You to Forget Google Exists Finland gave us Nokia, the company that taught an entire generation what a mobile phone could be before the iPhone rewrote the rules. That legacy didn’t vanish when Microsoft bought Nokia’s devices division in 2013. It splintered into smaller, fiercer projects, including Jolla, a company founded by ex-Nokia engineers who refused to let European mobile technology die quietly. Jolla launched its first phone in 2013 running Sailfish OS, a Linux-based alternative to Android and iOS, and while that device never broke into the mainstream, it proved something vital: you could build a commercial-grade mobile OS outside the American duopoly. Thirteen years later, Jolla is back with new hardware, 10,000 pre-orders, and a renewed argument that Europe deserves its own smartphone ecosystem. The new Jolla Phone costs €649 and ships in two waves, the first batch leaving Finland at the end of June 2026, with a second limited run of 2,000 units arriving in September. It runs Sailfish OS 5, the latest iteration of Jolla’s Linux-based platform, and it supports Android apps through an emulation layer that strips out Google’s surveillance infrastructure. The hardware sits comfortably in mid-range territory: a 6.36-inch Full HD+ AMOLED display, MediaTek Dimensity 7100 5G chipset, 8GB of RAM (expandable to 12GB), and 128GB of storage (upgradable to 256GB). Final assembly happens in Salo, Finland, the same city where Nokia used to manufacture millions of handsets per year, and every unit ships with a physical privacy switch that kills the microphones, cameras, and Bluetooth when you flip it. Designer: Jolla Phone The design language leans heavily into Scandinavian minimalism with a splash of nostalgia. The Orange colorway (one of three finishes alongside Snow White and Kaamos Black) features a vibrant coral hue that recalls the bold plastics Nokia used on devices like the Lumia 920. The rear panel is smooth and removable, emblazoned with a script “jolla” wordmark and the Sailfish OS logo at the bottom. Two camera lenses sit in the top-left corner in a vertical arrangement, and the overall footprint is boxy and utilitarian rather than chasing the curved-edge aesthetic that dominates Android flagships. Physical buttons line the right edge, the top houses what appears to be a modular accessory port, and the bottom edge packs a USB-C port flanked by speaker grilles. The front is all screen with minimal bezels, no notch, and no hole-punch cutout, giving the display a clean, uninterrupted canvas. Jolla’s privacy commitments go deeper than marketing copy. The physical privacy switch, located on the side of the device, cuts power to the microphones, cameras, and Bluetooth radios entirely, a hardware-level kill switch that software toggles can’t replicate. Sailfish OS doesn’t require a Google account, doesn’t collect location data for advertising, and doesn’t send telemetry back to corporate servers. The operating system compiles from source code in-house, and Jolla installs it manually in Finland rather than relying on third-party ODMs. The battery is user-replaceable, a feature that disappeared from flagship phones over a decade ago, and one that extends the device’s practical lifespan well beyond the typical two-year upgrade cycle. The modular back panel revives the “Other Half” concept from the original Jolla Phone, which allowed users to swap colorful rear covers that could also carry NFC chips to trigger UI themes and functionality changes. This time around, Jolla is opening the platform to third-party designers and hardware hackers, with potential add-ons including secondary e-ink displays, physical keyboards, and extended batteries. Android app compatibility comes courtesy of Jolla’s AppSupport layer, which emulates the Android runtime without Google Play Services, meaning banking apps, messaging platforms, and productivity tools run normally but without the tracking apparatus baked into standard Android. It’s a pragmatic compromise: you get access to the app ecosystem that makes a smartphone functional in 2026, but you don’t hand over behavioral data in exchange. Jolla CEO Sami Pienimäki positioned the phone explicitly as a statement of technological sovereignty, arguing that Europe’s dependence on American mobile infrastructure represents both a privacy liability and a strategic weakness. Only four commercial-grade mobile operating systems exist today: iOS and Android from the United States, HarmonyOS from China, and Sailfish OS from Finland. Antti Saarnio, chairman of the Jolla Group, acknowledges the phone will remain a niche product in the near term but frames it as infrastructure for what comes next, particularly as AI reshapes the form factors and interaction models we use to access computing. Whether Jolla scales beyond enthusiasts and privacy advocates depends on how well Sailfish OS holds up in daily use and whether the company can sustain hardware production beyond these initial batches. The Jolla Phone is available now for pre-order in EU countries, the UK, Norway, and Switzerland, priced at €649 with a €99 deposit required upfront. The September 2026 batch is capped at 2,000 units, and given that the first wave of pre-orders moved 10,000 devices in just three months, that inventory won’t last long. A U.S. launch is under consideration but has no confirmed timeline, and while the phone should theoretically work with major American carriers, it lacks FCC approval. If you’ve been waiting for a legitimate alternative to the iOS-Android duopoly, this is the closest thing Europe has built in over a decade. 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