• Midnight Wolf@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Security. You’re caught with your pants down if you have any personal data on a phone with an unlocked bootloader. All data is effectively plaintext, all security is nullified with trivial difficulty. This is the actual worst-case scenario for journalists, whistleblowers, or anyone who is or may become under surveillance for any reason.

    • Username@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      That’s wrong, data is still usually encrypted.

      A locked bootloader ‘just’ prevents tampering with the OS. You’re only pwned when using the phone after it has been manipulated.

      • Midnight Wolf@lemmy.world
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        1 year ago

        Yeah but if you have the phone with an unlocked bootloader and anyone gains access to it (physical or otherwise)…

        • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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          1 year ago

          They still wouldn’t be able to do very much. All an unlocked bootloader does is let you flash things via fastboot.

          Even with a locked bootloader, you could still get into recovery and cause mischief with physical access. You wouldn’t be able to access the storage partition without decrypting it, but you could still maybe flash stuff to the system partition to infect it for the next time the phone is booted up.

          Remote access to the phone won’t be able to do much of anything with an unlocked bootloader. The far bigger hazard is app signature spoofing (eg Magisk and MicroG), which if successfully exploited can cause all sorts of havok - you can have apps pretending to be other apps that have root access.

          Even then, though, I think it’s a fair trade of risk. The chances of any of this happening are very, very low, albeit the consequence is extreme. I personally prefer that to the absolutely certain risk that Google is spying on my phone, even if the consequences of that spying are relatively low.