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GrapheneOS Now Supports a Duress Reset PIN

GrapheneOS provides users with the ability to set a duress PIN/Password that will irreversibly wipe the device (along with any installed eSIMs) once entered anywhere where the device credentials are requested (on the lockscreen, along with any such prompt in the OS).

The wipe does not require a reboot and cannot be interrupted. It can be set up at Settings > Security > Duress Password in the owner profile. Both a duress PIN and password will need to be set to account for different profiles that may have different unlock methods.

Note that if the duress PIN/Password is the same as the actual unlock method, the actual unlock method always takes precedence, and therefore no wipe will occur.

Source: https://grapheneos.org/features#duress

https://grapheneos.social/@GrapheneOS/112547803121731809Open linkView original on lemm.ee
feddit.de

Mhm i can imagine that GrapheneOS will be marked as an illegal OS once Interpol and others get wind of this kill switch.

34
refaloreply
programming.dev

irreversibly wipe the device

And for anyone to actually go through the trouble of cloning a flash chip, you'd have to be an extremely high profile target.

15

TBH, in order to be forced to unlock your phone under duress, you’d have to be a pretty high profile target.

Why, that can happen to anyone at the airport when entering the USA, UK, Australia, etc. Or if you have been in a car accident, your cell phone will be confiscated in Germany, for example. Or when you were forced to unlock the phones and banking apps at gunpoint: https://www.cbsnews.com/chicago/news/robbers-unlock-phones-banking-apps-gunpoint-bucktown-chicago/

5

Wonder if this say a big "WIPING..." and shows a blank profile then.

Because it would be much more useful if this would erase real profile and then quickly switch to some fake profile looking real.

20

It doesn't say anything. It shuts the device down almost instantly, and simulnateously wipes the encryption keys from the secure element, ensuring that the data stored on the SSD can't be decrypted.

1
aussie.zone

I'm maxed out on open source contributions myself right now as maintainer of a large project

6

... and I've been told I'm demanding and entitled, but here's some jackass who downvoted one(@ryannathans) who is doing the work. You or I can never do enough to be worthy to request certain features or bug-fixes be given higher priority.

These people need to go back to Spez's, Musk's, or Zuck's playground, since they love having no say so much.

2
reddthat.com

Cool feature, I wonder if a duress fingerprint will be introduced in the future?

8
Jolteonreply
lemmy.zip

I feel like that would be a lot easier to accidentally trigger.

30
Everettreply
reddthat.com

You're not wrong, but like the duress pin, it would be a nice feature to have. Not everyone would have to set a duress fingerprint, just the people who find value in it.

4
Kayelreply
aussie.zone

Writing down a crypto wallet key in a self hosted password manager on a highly encrypted self hosted drive which degraded. Pretty much the same with the photos, if I didn't encrypt my backups I would have been able to recover more files.

4

Oh yikes.

I got out of crypto stuff long ago. But I was so paranoid with losing wallet keys that I'd put them everywhere in chunks, like a medieval quartered body spread all over Scotland.

1

Alternately, it could unlock the phone while also erasing specific parts of it, like message history and call logs, potentially replacing them with something you'd set up previously.

Edit: and obviously it would disable the duress pin and set the unlocking pin to it.

7

Depends on what you did! Say for example they're using Graphene to harass/paedophilia then they already have a copious amount of evidence on hand since they are there.

For organising peaceful protests that seems less of an issue and the other end of the chats is the weak link.

3

That's actually pretty cool. I just wish they would take a stance against proprietary software.

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GrapheneOS Now Supports a Duress Reset PIN | Spyke