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Android, afaik, is less secure by default to begin with. More freedom, more options to customize, more attack surface. Also, just because Cellebrite can't pwn iOS 17.4 yet, doesn't mean it can't do it a month ahead from now.
Another very important factor I can see is Apple's walled garden, where they could literally remote control your device. Through the new rapid security response (or whatever they called it in marketing wank) they can push updates to all active iOS devices more or less overnight - at least if the vulnerability is known to them and they have a patch. Compare that with Android where some devices don't receive any updates after the initial release.
No way graphene isn't leagues stronger than iPhone no?
They've even submitted their hardened malloc to upstream Linux, which is definitely more secure
To be fair Android does that now too with mainline and every OS upgrade they make more modules that get updated from the play store rather than OS updates.