Damus

Recent Notes

GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... We didn't add it and it's not a new feature. It has been there for quite a long time. It's a standard Android feature which is enabled when end session support is enabled. We plan to add a toggle for it instead of it always being there but we did not create that user interface. It exists in AOSP and the stock Pixel OS too but they don't enable end session support by default so it's only there when a device manager enables it. Android 16 QPR2 changed the user interface upstream.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... We didn't add it and it's not a new feature. It has been there for quite a long time. It's a standard Android feature which is enabled when end session support is enabled. We plan to add a toggle for it instead of it always being there but we did not create that user interface. It exists in AOSP and the stock Pixel OS too but they don't enable end session support by default so it's only there when a device manager enables it.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... Wiping specific secondary users as a duress action is something we could implement. It would be able to reliably wiping the data for their profiles. However, it would not be able to hide that the profiles existed and there would be leftover data showing that's the case which could be extracted via developer tools or an exploit. It would only be superficially stealthier, not at a low level. It would also at least need to reboot to make sure the data is gone if the profiles were AFU.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q...

> opens a duress profile and wipes the rest of the phone, or maybe

Reliably wiping data for the Owner user will prevent the phone from booting so it might as well be a full wipe.

> wipes the saved data in all the apps but keep the apps themselves

The data could potentially be recovered without wiping the overall profiles.

> delete specific apps and leave the rest of the data intact

Same thing, the data could potentially be recovered unless profiles are deleted as a whole.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... There was no release of the stock Pixel OS for the Pixel 7a this month, likely due to a major Wi-Fi bandwidth regression. It hasn't received stable Android 16 QPR2 officially yet. We got reports of users reproducing the issue and haven't decided if we should release what we currently have to Stable or not yet. We used the final Android 16 QPR2 Beta factory images for it which are nearly the same as the stable release images for the other devices.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... @nprofile1q... /e/ is much worse than LineageOS and there's no device where it provides anywhere close to current privacy or security patches. It's incredibly far behind even on Pixel phones. LineageOS has delays for major updates so it can't keep up with current driver/firmware updates on Pixels but there are other devices where it doesn't have that issue.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... @nprofile1q...

> This is where LineageOS comes in, allowing you to have an up-to-date and clean system.

No, LineageOS does not provide you with an up-to-date system. Updates are very delayed and you don't get driver/firmware updates.

>. But with the former, you'd need to buy a new device,

You need a new device for security patches. Your current device has many severe unpatched vulnerabilities including remotely exploitable ones. 2 years without High/Critical driver/firmware patches.
GrapheneOS profile picture
@nprofile1q... You can install Pixel Camera via either Aurora Store or the sandboxed Google Play Store. It will run without sandboxed Google Play in the same profile. You only need to grant the Camera permission + Storage Scopes + Sensors permission for photos. Microphone too for videos. It doesn't need the Network permission to work but may behave slightly differently since Google loves using feature flags to have certain changes/features for a random % of users to see which goes better.