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linuxphones·Linux PhonesbyAZX3RIC

Local goodwill has a Pixel 3a for cheap but it has Factory Reset Protection on when booted.

I want to grab the phone to try out Ubuntu Touch but I don't want to contribute to e-waste if I can't get past the FRP.

Any advise?

View original on lemmy.world
CameronDevreply
programming.dev

If the FRP is on, you shouldn't be able to reset or flash it. Therefore, ewaste. Sorry for the overly terse initial message.

28
CameronDevreply
programming.dev

Won't the android settings app prompt for the login details before reset? (At least in the normal case, the google keyboard bypass seems like it does, but who knows if that still works)

2

IIrc, it prompts for the lock-screen pattern or alike, but not for the credentials of the Google account.

3
erebionreply
news.erebion.eu

I've ported Mobian to the Pixel 3a, it can therefore still be used and is a perfectly fine phone. Also, there aren't many other small phones one could use with Linux.

3
9tr6gyp3reply
lemmy.world

You can port a lot of things to a Pixel 3a, but the firmware has been end of life for years now. At the hardware level, its always vulnerable. The OS alone can not protect you, even if its up to date.

0
jnod4reply
lemmy.ca

The smartphone is far from ewaste, great jack, with good camera, makes the perfect device for an mp3 player to take along hikes.

4

As long as it never touches any network ever again and there is never anything personal installed on it ever again then it should be OK. Be sure to rip out the GSM and/or CDMA chipset, wifi, bluetooth, and NFC. When connecting it to another device through USB, make sure that device is offline and ADB mode is disabled. Remove all sim cards as well.

There are much better devices for your purpose than some old ass phone tho

0
erebionreply
news.erebion.eu

Whatever. Still not a reason to constantly throw hardware away unless you have a specific threat model.

4

My threat model is anything vulnerable that can access a network should be gutted and smelted down if it has been abandoned from the manufacturer.

Don't throw it in the trash. Recycle the materials instead to rebuild newer better hardware.

1

Now, I can only help part of the way but maybe this will get you started…

If you can plug it into a computer, and the computer sees it…theoretically you should be able to flash it.

2

You reached the end