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A radio that's compromised is a tracking device that you're carrying around with you and that includes Bluetooth, Wi-Fi, etc. Not to mention that things like Wi-Fi pose a greater threat than you probably realize. They can actually gain info on the environment beyond location.
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No, I don't, and I specifically brought up that it's pretty bad to be switching away from a modem with substantial auditing, mitigations, sandboxing, research directed at it, a driver which is designed not to trust it and has a lot of attention from researchers for that, etc.
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Look, go ahead and get hardware that's insecure and unfixable from day one. Give up on trying to peddle scams and misinformation to me. You really don't know the subject matter, and it's not interesting to have you try to explain things to me that you don't know about.
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I gave you plenty of information which you ignore and don't look into further, and you then go ahead with continuing to make the same clearly false and refuted claims over and over again. I don't see much point in talking to someone not being honest or acting in good faith.
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So, as before, ignoring most of what I am saying and just cherry-picking bits of it and misrepresenting the topic along with what I have said. I really don't see the point in any of these threads.
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Replying to and
It's largely the norm to have isolated radios. Wi-Fi is often a chip connected via PCIe that's not properly isolated and has full memory access, even beyond what the kernel can directly access itself, but it's pretty rare to have a *cellular* radio like that on an actual phone.
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Replying to and
Wi-Fi has typically not been included on the smartphone SoC until recently and therefore it was up to OEMs to go out of the way to implement isolation for it and of course they don't actually tend to do that. Most OEMs don't really have hardware security teams doing that stuff.
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