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Google Wants To Make Stolen Android Phones Basically Unsellable

mercredi 14 mai 2025, 00:02 , par Slashdot
Google Wants To Make Stolen Android Phones Basically Unsellable
Google is enhancing Android's Factory Reset Protection (FRP) to make stolen phones virtually unusable by detecting setup wizard bypasses and requiring a second factory reset until ownership is verified. Android Authority reports: You can factory reset an Android phone in several ways. However, triggering a reset through the Android recovery menu or Google's Find My Device service activates Factory Reset Protection (FRP). During setup after such a reset, the wizard requires you to verify ownership by either signing into the previously associated Google account or entering the device's former lock screen PIN, password, or pattern. Failing this verification step blocks setup completion, rendering the device unusable.

Factory Reset Protection (FRP) is a valuable feature that discourages theft by rendering stolen Android phones useless to potential buyers if wiped improperly. However, FRP isn't foolproof; thieves have discovered numerous methods over the years to circumvent it. These bypasses typically involve skipping the setup wizard, allowing someone to use the phone without entering the previous owner's Google account details or screen lock.

During The Android Show: I/O Edition, Google announced plans to 'further harden Factory Reset protections, which will restrict all functionalities on devices that are reset without the owner's authorization.' While the company didn't elaborate much, a screenshot it shared suggests that Android will likely detect if someone bypasses the setup wizard and then force another factory reset, preventing unauthorized use until the user proves ownership. Google stated this FRP improvement is coming 'later this year.' Since the stable Android 16 release is coming soon, this timeline suggests the feature won't be part of the initial launch. It might arrive later in one of Android 16's Quarterly Platform Releases (QPRs), but that remains to be seen.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
https://mobile.slashdot.org/story/25/05/13/2056206/google-wants-to-make-stolen-android-phones-basica...

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Date Actuelle
mer. 14 mai - 03:28 CEST