
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 September, we prioritized fixes for the out-of-box experience on PureOS Crimson. For the rest of the beta milestone, we are prioritizing work that benefits the most from user feedback. That includes functionality that must account for device-to-device variations and that is strongly influenced by users' individual preferences.
A sophisticated malware campaign, dubbed “EvilAI” by cybersecurity firm Trend Micro, is leveraging AI-enhanced software to infiltrate organizations across the globe. By posing as legitimate productivity tools, this malware evades traditional security measures and exploits user trust.
Signaling System 7 (SS7) was designed in the 1970s to let telecom carriers route calls, deliver SMS, and enable roaming. It was never built with authentication or encryption in mind. Security wasn’t part of the plan. The assumption was simple: All carriers are trusted.