This device is going to get at best around 2 years of proper security updates due to using an SoC launched in late 2020 with 3 years of support. They're claiming they'll be providing something they won't really be providing without doing the work for it.
Conversation
Replying to
On what basis do you claim that they need vendor support for the SoC to provide support for the phone using it?
2
3
Replying to
They're shipping the firmware, drivers, libraries and other device support code provided by Qualcomm including proprietary and shared source code that they're not able to continue supporting themselves.
They've demonstrated they don't provide any proper extended support already.
2
9
Replying to
So it's less a matter of not being possible, and more a matter of them not being up to the task of doing it.
2
The likelihood that a tiny vendor will be able to support that SoC for longer than Google is pretty much nil. Even when you look at the monthlies or quarterlies from Samsung, past a certain age there are conspicuously missing fixes that would require SoC vendor involvement.
1
1
Samsung is able to do 4 years for most of their devices now because they time most of them with the SoC releases and Qualcomm has moved from 3 to 4 years of support. Google could have moved from 3 to 4 years for Pixel 6 if they'd stayed with Snapdragon too but can do better now.
Samsung will hopefully be able to drop Snapdragon, move fully to Exynos and provide 5-6 years of support too. It'd be great if they started selling them and if there was actually some real competition with Snapdragon making it better. Snapdragon is best option for other vendors.
1
1
Mediatek, etc. are all complete trash with absolutely horrible privacy/security and often have actual non-theoretical, clearly non-accidental backdoors.
Snapdragon isn't bad compared to every other option but it's clear that it would be a lot better if they had competition...
2
Show replies


