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This is why I still use an Android custom ROM in 2024

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This is why I still use an Android custom ROM in 2024

I am surprised that Google spends so much time tackling custom ROMs via it's Play Integrity API. If only they paid that much attention to say, curating the Play Store more, it had be much better for everyone

98 comments
  • This is a very complex topic that is very hard to draw the line on.
    As a technical person who follows hacking and security news i can understand google introduced the api and warnings, as phones are getting hacked and unlocked bootloader or root can be abused to keep your malware going, and has been abused in the past.

    But as a user of fairphone/lineageOS, who tells google, apple, meta, ... all of them to fuck off when i can, this scares me. The lockdown of devices can and is going too far. Hell, i even consider samsung's android ui changes to be going too far, as it changes a shit ton of stuff and really is not a stock android experience. It locks users in their environment..

    • I find it funny that Google and some banks are so worried about security on Android that I have to have up to date system, app and can't be custom ROM, can't be rooted and whatnot. And then they'll allow you to login to their bank from Internet Explorer on XP or some shit.

    • Can you cite examples of rooted smartphones leading to significant data breaches or financial losses? When the topic comes up, I always see hypotheticals, never examples of it actually happening.

      It seems to me a good middle ground would be to make it reasonably easy (i.e. a magic button combination at boot followed by dire warnings and maybe manually typing in a couple dozen characters from a key signature) for users to add keys so that they can have a verified OS of their choice. Of course, there's very little profit motive to do such a thing.

      • Pre-locked bootloader times ive had multiple android devices be passed to me that were malware infected that changed the rom in a way that even a factory reset would not remove the malware. Locked bootloaders made it so the rom needed to be signed and unaltered on boot, fixing this. Root access also means apps can use and access api's in android that it normally cant, changing settings and things inside android it shouldnt. What do you think happens when malware comes in? :p

        Imo, i agree what you said. bootloaders should remain locked but you should be able to somehow, in the bootloader, be able to add the os' signature/keys to the bootloader's trusted stuff like how secure boot on a pc keeps os signing keys and verification stuff inside the tpm.

        This way you can install lineage os for example, tell bootloader to trust it, and lock bootloader again so nothing can be changed anymore.
        I wouldnt take this from user input, as that is controlable by malware, but rather come from the OS itself. Maybe even during installation, idk

    • Stock android experience is the exception, not the norm, sadly. Some manufactures like Motorola or HMD have a light touch and close to stock but other ones don't. The worst offenders are Chinese brands who twist it so much and without much benefit(Atleast, Samsung's ONE UI is customizable as heck, can't say the same for Realme's).

  • I'm still using LOS and still fight with google over Play integrity from time to time. there's a fairly new patch that spoofs the fingerprint of the phone and fixes the issue entirely for me (play integrity fix by chiteroman) as long as it's updated, my gPay still works. I prefer using custom OS because it's much more customizable and has little to no bloatware. any unwanted apps can be removed. I can route my VPN to my WiFi hotspot, in order to get full speed tethering. (I'm a T-Mobile user and they throttle) I have a system-wide ad-blocker that uses the hosts file. I have the ability to allow root to only some apps, and deny it to others.

    To me, its worth doing. I have no internet at my house, so I primarily use this to get online. The stock T-Mobile firmware is laggy and loaded up with their apps you can't delete. You'll get the "3g speeds" hotspot and their annoying branding on everything.

    Going back to that would really suck!

    • This is offtopic, but fuck it, might as well.

      Why do you use a digital wallet? For me, money is one of those thing I literally can't allow to fail; growing up poor means it's still a touchy subject. A digital wallet adds extra risk of payment failure everytime it is used.

      So, what does a digital wallet add that makes it worth not just the effort of setting it up in a stock system, but also in a custom ROM where it is actively broken by the app developers as a form of "security"?

      For reference, I still keep cash on my person in case my cards (or their machine) fails.

      I know I posted this on your comment, but I would love to hear everyone's answer to this.

  • I don't think they do it actively. There's just not a big enough issue for them in custom ROMs to even bother doing something about it.

    Rather, they got other issues to tackle and custom ROMs are so off their radar, they get swept up simply because nobody cares (either way) to check.

    • Google doesn't want distributions of open source Android without Google services to be a viable option for mainstream users because that would reduce their ability to extract profits from the Android ecosystem.

      While the focus is surely more on OEMs than end users at this point, I'm sure Google wants to keep the difficulty level for end users high enough that it remains niche.

      • Iโ€™m sure Google wants to keep the difficulty level for end users high enough that it remains niche.

        I really do not think they need to. We tech communities massively overestimate the desire and even contextual awareness (and desire to have such awareness) of regular users to engage with these topics.

        Keep in mind that the vast majority of Firefox users - a browser inherently more used by tech-savvy people! - have 0 addons installed. And probably 0 desire to change this. Or to even waste thought seconds on considering whether to change it.

        To users, smartphones are tools. Like hammers. If it stops being a useful hammer, do you take the head off and re-forge it? No, you buy a different hammer that does what you need it to do.

    • There will be a big enough issue if people start saying how they've got theirs with no issues. The primary motivation for people not bothering with Linux is because Windows "just works" and Linux presumably was work. If degoogling stopped being work, then more would do it.

      Linux has become extreme easy mode as well as a polished non intrusive experience and people are really drawn by that!

98 comments