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Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
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Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
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I was simply saying that the chances of someone taking a mold of my finger to get access to what I have on my phone is the most ridiculous thing I have ever heard. For some of you, maybe it is less far fetched. Maybe you are blackmail-able. Maybe you have access to money and power. Maybe your lives are on your phone. For me, a skimmer on a credit card reader at a gas pump, or an ebay seller taking advantage, or someone breaking into my car are far more realistic concerns. In my life, if someone got access to my phone, it would be to sell it, not post something from my Twitter account. |
Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
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or maybe you know some people, that some people might find interesting PS and if and when it happens, you won't even know of it |
Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
Just a small wake-up call, I received an email yesterday with one of my throwaway passwords in the subject. It said, "I am aware that this is your password, pay me $lots in bitcoin or I will do some nasty things". I have not used that password for a long time and do not know which website was hacked to get hold of it. It's just a good reminder to never drop guard on security.
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Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
I feel like there are two different conversations going on at the same time. I am VERY aware of the security weaknesses of the world we live in and the dangers that follow. I do not take the possibilities lightly.
The conversation being had (by me) was, on a cell phone, is a fingerprint reader adequate security, or do we have to fear people taking molds of our fingers to gain access. |
Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
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Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
I'm with imaginaryenemy on this rambling discussion.
Security on cell phones has so far always been a compromise between convenience and the strength of security. And only you, for your own usecase, know how to balance the two. I've seen people go through the most ridiculous hurdles to secure the most irrelevant things. Because "security". I've seen people disregarding security for convenience even as it opens holes for quite sensitive data. Myself, I couldn't be arsed to fiddle with that pin code everytime i unlock my phone. Because I do it hundreds of times per day. Nor with the cumbersome fingerprint scanner of current Sailfish X (I tried). The data I have on my phone is not in importance proportional to the inconvenience and time lost I'd suffer daily, hundreds of times. For many others this is not the case. They have data that needs to be protected better. And each one of us knows the balance for themselves best, where the line between convenience and security lies. The truth of the matter is of course, that much more people do not have the knowledge to make an educated decision on this. But that's besides the point on this forum, as I think most of the participants here are well enough versed on the topic. |
Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
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You May think differential in som years when you realize how stupid that was to not care. I mean look around the world populist leadeers makes dictators rule then People like you will loose since you did not care. The only I can say:you are not alone puttning The head in The sand. /facepalm |
Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
Gave away my newly bought Samsung S8 and will use xPhone for my secondary sim. Anything new when it comes to services or apps?
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Re: Sailfish OS (officially) on Sony Xperia devices
I was somewhat expecting for Jolla to release the 2.2.1 today as they were asking for strings to be translated by 11th of July. Seems like they might have hit some delays along the line as 2.2.1 is most likely the last update before 3.0 and had to get all the packages prepared for 3.0 update.
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