I fully support that approach, but this effectively means accepting that the majority uses a tool you cannot or will not use. Librem is never going to be in a position with sufficient market share to counter the network effect of WhatsApp in countries that are hooked on it.
Hence my question in response to gregknicholson's statement:
>> This is one of the problems the Librem 5 is designed to solve.
By providing a coherent set of easy-to-use, privacy-respecting alternatives.
It makes it easier for those who _want_ to switch, but don't have the confidence/skill/energy to figure everything out on their own.
Similarly, Disroot made it easy to switch away from Google, by providing a complete (for my purposes) drop-in replacement; Ubuntu made it easy to switch from Windows.
Hence my question in response to gregknicholson's statement:
>> This is one of the problems the Librem 5 is designed to solve.
> How?