As a Fairphone owner, I use them for one reason I rarely see mentioned.
I think they're very imperfect phones for a lot of reasons: they're bad value on a pure hardware specs to retail price comparison, their security update support isn't where it could be & the repairability - while best on the market - still has gaps.
However, the rarely mentioned story is their supply chain advocacy initiatives. Not only do they try to source as much of the hardware ethically as they can, their work has also had a broad knock-on effect on the entire industry. Their living wage advocacy for the assembly factories they use has resulted in wage improvements within those supplier companies for employees working on non-FP hardware as well. Their work in Congo with the Fair Cobalt Alliance is a big part of the reason that other companies like Apple are even able to source "certificate recycled" cobalt for their batteries (albeit those certifications are misleading due to the mass balance system, they're still a lot better than nothing).
I think they're very imperfect phones for a lot of reasons: they're bad value on a pure hardware specs to retail price comparison, their security update support isn't where it could be & the repairability - while best on the market - still has gaps.
However, the rarely mentioned story is their supply chain advocacy initiatives. Not only do they try to source as much of the hardware ethically as they can, their work has also had a broad knock-on effect on the entire industry. Their living wage advocacy for the assembly factories they use has resulted in wage improvements within those supplier companies for employees working on non-FP hardware as well. Their work in Congo with the Fair Cobalt Alliance is a big part of the reason that other companies like Apple are even able to source "certificate recycled" cobalt for their batteries (albeit those certifications are misleading due to the mass balance system, they're still a lot better than nothing).