Hi all!
A lot of time has passed since I last gave updates on the mailing list 
about the arm64 port of Tails. I've been quite busy at work and I still 
am (in fact, I am busier now than ever), but I've procrastinated writing 
this email for 6+ months now, so I thought I'd better start writing it 
now and finish whenever I finish :-) So here you go.
The first big update is last year I have upstreamed support for arm64 
Linux to the Tor Browser and the Mullvad Browser [1]. In fact, the Tor 
Project has been building official Linux arm64 nightlies since last 
December, see e.g. [2]. Despite numerous requests from users and 
sponsors alike [3-14], alpha and release builds have not been made 
available yet. Oh, well. Because of this, my arm64 Tails images still 
come with my own release builds of the Tor Browser installed [15]. The 
code is the same as upstream, except that the build scripts are tweaked 
so I can use an arm64 builder (specifically, an Apple M1 Mini running 
Debian Forky) instead of the x86_64 (cross-)builders upstream uses.
The second update is more personal, but Tails-related nonetheless. A few 
months ago I became a Debian Developer, uploading, to work on supporting 
Apple Silicon machines and on Rust $STUFF. This is Tails-related first 
of all because it is a spin-off of my work on the Tails port: to port 
Tails to Apple Silicon, I first had to port Debian, and in the process I 
learned a bunch of stuff which lead me to contribute to Debian and 
ultimately to become a DD. In particular, I became a member of the 
Bananas Team [16], which maintains all Apple Silicon related packages in 
Debian. Additionally, still within the Bananas Team, I'm now maintaining 
the infrastructure and extra packages (e.g. the Asahi kernel) needed to 
run Debian on Apple Silicon, that can't be in Debian proper because they 
are not fully upstreamed yet [17]. You can reach out to the Bananas Team 
on IRC at #debian-bananas or via the mailing list 
debian-arm-apple@???.
The second way that is related to Debian is, starting from version 7.0, 
my Apple Silicon Tails port uses the same packages the Bananas Team is 
distributing to Trixie users via the debian repository at 
https://bananas-archive.debian.net/bananas-archive. Packages are built 
in Salsa [18], Debian's Gitlab instance, and they are then distributed 
using infrastructure which Thomas Glanzmann is generously lending to us. 
I've talked about Thomas before: he's the guy who has been providing the 
port of Debian Bookworm to Apple Silicon for years. He has now joined 
the Bananas Team and we're working together to distribute Debian Trixie 
to users.
Specifically, Tails 7.x for Apple Silicon -- which I now distribute at 
[19], not in the shady MEGA folder anymore -- is just plain Tails 7.x 
for arm64 plus the Asahi kernel, mesa drivers and u-boot bootloader. 
This marks a huge difference with Tails 6.x, for which I had to backport 
50+ of packages to Bookworm. All those packages are now included in 
Debian Trixie proper, so they come straight from the Debian archive. 
Actually, only the Asahi kernel is still needed in principle: the Asahi 
mesa drivers are already in trixie-backports (I'm not installing them 
from there, but rather from the Bananas archive, just so I don't have to 
enable the extra trixie-backports sources) and the u-boot bootloader is 
only needed for updating the bootloader itself, which is disabled at 
this time anyway.
As for the arm64 port in general, vanilla Tails 7.0 for arm64 (i.e. 
everything from the Debian archive, no meaningful departures from x86_64 
Tails) was tested to work on a ThinkPad X13s with minor tweaks 
(essentially, add the DTBs, a couple of scripts and some optional boot 
parameters) which I've not merged to my main development branch 
(wip/arm64) yet, since the Apple Silicon port is based on that too, and 
I haven't had time to test the two of them in conjunction. I don't 
expect they will conflict though. On the other hand, something broke 
along the way of upgrading to Trixie in the Raspberry port (probably 
some kernel module is missing) and, again, no time to fix, so I'm not 
building that version for the moment.
I have one question for the Tails developers/infra maintainers. Is there 
any chance Tails could provide time-based and tagged snapshots for arm64 
packages in addition to amd64? Would it be too expensive? That would 
greatly simplify the work of contributors (for instance, there was a 
request to the mailing list just a few days ago), as at this time a 
dirty DNS hack is required to make the build system install arm64 
packages from Debian instead of from the Tails snapshot servers.
Cheers!
[1] 
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/applications/tor-browser-build/-/merge_requests/1068
[2] 
https://nightlies.tbb.torproject.org/nightly-builds/tor-browser-builds/tbb-nightly.2025.10.28/nightly-linux-aarch64/
[3] 
https://forum.torproject.org/t/what-is-needed-for-tor-browser-on-non-x86-hardware/1031
[4] 
https://forum.torproject.org/t/tor-browser-for-arm-linux/5240
[5] 
https://forum.torproject.org/t/issues-with-virtual-environment-on-m2-chip-mac/5960
[6] 
https://forum.torproject.org/t/why-is-tor-download-page-serving-me-the-wrong-architecture/20084
[7] 
https://forum.torproject.org/t/unable-to-install-tor-browser-on-ubuntu-25-04-for-raspberry-pi-5/18939/4
[8] 
https://github.com/mullvad/mullvad-browser/issues/11
[9] 
https://github.com/mullvad/mullvad-browser/issues/90
[10] 
https://github.com/mullvad/mullvad-browser/issues/498
[11] 
https://github.com/mullvad/mullvad-browser/issues/468
[12] 
https://github.com/mullvad/mullvad-browser/issues/473
[13] 
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/applications/mullvad-browser/-/issues/434
[14] 
https://gitlab.torproject.org/tpo/applications/mullvad-browser/-/issues/473
[15] 
https://gitlab.com/NoisyCoil/tor-browser-build/-/releases
[16] 
https://wiki.debian.org/Teams/Bananas
[17] 
https://wiki.debian.org/InstallingDebianOn/Apple/M1
[18] 
https://salsa.debian.org/bananas-team/wip/
[19] 
https://tails.noisycoil.dev/images/