Yet another excuse to keep checking our phones.
- These changes are a good thing. - Requiring a pin means no one can use your fingerprint or your face to unlock your device. - An NSA agent recommended restarting your phone every week. This can potentially clear out malware that doesn’t have permissions to start after a reboot. - It’s more than that. After restart your phone goes into a more-secure Before First Unlock (BFU) state so it’s much harder to penetrate. - Apple started doing this a few months ago and I guess Google is just catching up. - Thank you for the info. - I read up more on BFU and I didn’t realize that encryption was a requirement for Android 10 and higher. - Very interesting. - What I read: Dakota State University DigForCE Lab: BFU and AFU Lock States - Yeah I learned about it from reading up on the Israeli hacking software called Pegasus. There were several devices that they could hack in AFU state but not in BFU state. 
 
 
 
- deleted by creator - Copying Apple’s security policy, perhaps? - GrapheneOS security policy > Apple security policy 
- This was a grapheneos feature before it was an iOS one. 
 
 
- Yet another excuse to keep checking our phones. - What? You think Google cares to wait 3 days to make you check your phone? No if that was their objective you’d be checking earlier. - The point here is to keep encryption keys out of memory on a device you haven’t used so that someone with physical access to your phone can’t pull the keys. 
- Should have made it customizable rather than hard-coded 3 days. - I wonder if there’s a technical argument to not doing this – it’s harder for attacks to potentially change the setting if it isn’t a setting. 
 
- It would be great if it wasn’t just in Play Services but in base Android so that every de-Googled system had it too. Still a good change. 
- Fuck Android. - I hope a consistent, user-friendly alternative that works on all Android phones arrives soon. I’ve tried so many with an old phone and they’re always a pain to install and then don’t work quite right. I also don’t want to spend $500USD for a phone designed specifically to sidestep Android. - It would help if Android/Google didn’t consistently try to block every single thing that would allow you to get rid of Android, but they’re never going to allow that. - I hope that something user-friendly and consistent arrives soon. I will ditch Android in a second when that happens. - While I agree with most of the things you said, automatic reboots is a good security feature. And it isn’t android that’s the problem. It’s Google Play Services. 
- Uh apple is already implementing this too. - It’s been in Apple devices since iOS 18 and it’s a good thing Android is adding it. 
 
- It would help if Android/Google didn’t consistently try to block every single thing that would allow you to get rid of Android - If you’re referring to bootloader unlock, that’s not really anything to do with Android, that’s to do with carriers and manufacturers. The first-party devices don’t have that. 
- I don’t think that Pixels (made by Google) are designed to sidestep Android ;). Unfortunately, what you’re asking can’t really be done because of the vast hardware incompatibilities between brands of Android phones and between generations of them. - The best privacy option ironically seems to be GrapheneOS, which runs on Pixels, as alluded to above. You can get older Pixels pretty cheap. They aren’t my favorite phones but I sometimes consider doing that. 
 









