A Security & Privacy Focused Phone with a Secure Supply Chain
The Liberty Phone retains the software security and privacy features of the Librem 5 while adding a transparent, secure supply chain with manufacturing in the USA. The Liberty Phone also has 4GB of memory and 128GB built-in storage.
Starting at $1,999
A Powerful Tablet with Freedom in Mind
Powerful 4 cores, tablet with AMOLED display, 4096 pressure levels pen and a detachable keyboard. It will let you express your creativity anywhere, anytime.
Shipping with PureBoot (Coreboot +Heads) and PureOS, you make sure that the Librem 11 is fully yours and is respecting your Privacy, Security and Freedom by default.
Starting at $999
A Security & Privacy Focused Phone
The Librem 5 is the original Linux kernel based phone produced by Purism with 3GB of memory and 32GB of storage.
Starting at $799.
Powerful 6 cores, ultra-portable laptop designed chip-by-chip, line-by-line, to respect your rights to privacy, security, and freedom.
Starting at $1370
Smaller than a Mac Mini, slightly bigger than a Raspberry Pi. More freedom, more privacy, more security.
Starting at $799
Privacy-focused cellular plan for the Librem 5 and other unlocked phones.
Starting at $39/month
In late August, Italy took a decisive step to protect women from one of the most insidious forms of online abuse: the non‑consensual sharing of intimate or misappropriated images. After years of complaints, activism, and public outrage, a notorious website — home to thousands of stolen photos of women, from ordinary citizens to public figures — was forced offline following a wave of legal and political pressure.
The New York Times recently reported that a hacker using the pseudonym “Tim” scraped publicly available data from Spotify and published it on his own website. Using automated bots, “Tim” harvested user playlists — many of them tied to identifiable names, locations, and even personal notes in titles or descriptions.
Recently, the EU Data Act was officially enacted — and with it, a new era of enforceable digital rights. Where the GDPR set the policy framework, the Data Act demands proof: verifiable, auditable systems that deliver true data portability, secure interoperability, and privacy‑by‑design across sectors.