The first rule of smartphone is absolutely no one else gets to use your phone. They don't even get to be alone in a room with it.
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@korvys@SwiftOnSecurity Basic functionality should be reachable with trivial pin/gesture from lock screen. Editing should need secure login -
@RichFelker@SwiftOnSecurity So, like, photos on the lock screen, unlock that to get to phone calls, unlock again to get to settings? -
@korvys@SwiftOnSecurity Roughly. But I mean you should be able to do all kinds of non-privileged everyday tasks without the second login. -
@RichFelker@SwiftOnSecurity Yeah, sorry, those were just examples. -
@RichFelker@SwiftOnSecurity I wonder if you could build a custom lock screen to do it (on android anyway)? -
@korvys@SwiftOnSecurity I don't think so. It needs interaction with applications and the whole security/privilege model of the system. -
@korvys@SwiftOnSecurity Android is really badly designed. My LTG is a replacement that runs 'droid apps sandboxed and has strong sec. model -
@korvys@SwiftOnSecurity And@musllibc and our related projects are intended to be ingredients in that.
End of conversation
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