• onlinepersona@programming.dev
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    1 day ago

    If only there were a simple easy to flash ROMs onto phones that normies could do. Just plug it into a computer, run a program, follow instructions and have lineage is or so on it.

      • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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        1 day ago

        Can lineage do that now? 😮 That would be great! There are so many cheap phones that lineage supports, it would make it very affordable for people in India to make a large step towards degoogling!

        • ApertureUA@lemmy.today
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          9 hours ago

          Well, there’s a web installer (Chromium only because it’s using very unsafe features of course) that is used by ProtonAOSP and GrapheneOS currently. LineageOS people don’t want to add that because it’s impossible to troubleshoot if it doesn’t work, would make Firefox users feel left out, and because the normal installation procedure is a matter of some tech literacy.

          And there are hundreds of native wrappers around fastboot (look up “fastboot GUI”) and ones specifically for installing ROMs (look up “LineageOS installer”. All of which break in all sorts of ways. The only example I can think of for a somewhat good one is the embedded for MiTool, the tool specifically for officially unlocked Xiaomi devices. Well, good luck getting a Xiaomi phone officially unlocked, however.

          Almost forgot the thing I said “I have news for you” for. The closest thing to what you described (that is guaranteed to work) is opening the LineageOS website and blindly following instructions there. They are really specific and it would be really difficult to misunderstand.

          • onlinepersona@programming.dev
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            21 hours ago

            Could be cool to support it for lineageos. GrapheneOS is limited to a single brand and there are many brands in India and around the world which will be forced by the Indian government to install that spyware.

  • Libb@piefed.social
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    3 days ago

    Soon available in every country, no doubt, as obviously we all deserve to be… protected from our-naughty-selves.

  • deliriousdreams@fedia.io
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    3 days ago

    What does the app actually do? They call it an anti-fraud app, but I don’t understand what fraud it’s supposed to fight?

    • embed_me@programming.dev
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      2 days ago

      It probably scans installed apps, settings that could compromise access (for eg USB debugging, bootloader unlocking), apk files in storage, etc all while sending juicy infometrics to an unsecured database

      • DahGangalang@infosec.pub
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        3 days ago

        Union Minister for Communications Jyotiraditya Scindia claimed on Tuesday that the Sanchar Saathi app, a fraud reporting app the government wants pre-installed on all devices, will be optional and can be deleted by users.

        “… If you don’t want Sanchar Saathi, you can delete it. It is optional… It is our duty to introduce this app to everyone. Keeping it in their devices or not is up to the user,” he said to reporters.

        So it sounds like it can be removed, though I can’t help but feel like it might leave malicious artifacts (this is based on absolutely no evidence and is purely speculation on my part)

        • 0_o7@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          3 days ago

          In recent Android devices, you can disable and even uninstall apps for users. But for some system apps, when you go back the disabled apps info page, the “Force Stop” button isn’t greyed out like it should be anymore.

          Like why is the force stop button active when the app is disabled. And this usually happens in OEM devices stock ROMs, not on custom ROMs afaik.

          It’s either a bug or intentional. Can’t tell.

          • DahGangalang@infosec.pub
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            2 days ago

            Did a pinch of digging and this Stack Overflow Question seems to be the best “all in one” answer to your question.

            To try to explain from what I’m seeing:

            • Disable stops any “autostart” services/processes from starting. It also tries to gracefully stop any background processes and services.
            • Force Stop kills those processes forcefully (but doesn’t necessarily stop them from auto starting again).
            • Its possible (though unlikely) for you to Disable an app and there to be a delay for all processes and services to die.
            • Thus it can be useful to Disable, then Force Stop if you really want something dead.

            That said, in most cases it looks like its more likely to be a “UI Bug”. Theoretically, if no processes are running for an app, the Force Stop button is supposed to be deactivated (greyed out), but this check is apparently not very authoritatively checked, and defaults to Active if the OS isn’t sure.

            Hopefully any wrong info I’ve stated will summon a true expert to explain better.

  • Scoopta@programming.dev
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    3 days ago

    Can someone summerize the article, for some reason it thinks I’m using AdBlock despite not and won’t let me actually read it