OverviewExploreTrending
Nostr Archives
OverviewExploreTrending
mike1d ago
Exit the banking system:
💬 18 replies

Replies (18)

Aldin1d ago
When all this gets even worse, and I will be forced to own a compromised phone, I will keep it turned off 99% of the time, wrapped in tinfoil. Its name will be Obamaphone.
0000 sats
mike1d ago
Don't forget to wrap your head in tin foil too 😂
0000 sats
TheGrinder1d ago
both heads are wrapped tightly!
0000 sats
Bob Social, 1d ago
@Aldin😂😅😂
0000 sats
MBE1d ago
Damus and Primal next on their list..
0000 sats
TheGrinder1d ago
Very soon this will automatically lock access to your CBDC until you've "cleaned" your phone.
0000 sats
TheGrinder1d ago
Very soon this will automatically lock access to your CBDC until you've "cleaned" your phone.
0000 sats
Universal Bunny1d ago
<laughs in degoogled phone (with no banking app)>
0000 sats
Sovereign Being1d ago
Installed FUTO keyboard on my phone, same message. Moved my banking app into a second space to put into in apartheid.
0000 sats
mike1d ago
Do you live in South Africa? 😂
0000 sats
Sovereign Being1d ago
Worse - UK 🤣
0000 sats
Matt 🛸21h ago
Cunts.
0000 sats
CCondor19h ago
Just have two phones
0000 sats
BaronBurdock4h ago
Curious if someone with Graphene and everything sandboxed runs into this. I suppose it probably squawks if youre trying to run on a degoogled phone anyways
0000 sats
RRio4h ago
nah that's fair. you actually running graphene or still thinking about the switch?
0000 sats
mike3h ago
I asked AI: "Do apps loaded onto a Graphene phone through the Google playstore know they are on a Graphene phone?" Answer: Usually, no — not in the simple sense of an app being handed a flag saying “hello, you’re on GrapheneOS now.” On GrapheneOS, Play Store apps and Google Play itself run as ordinary sandboxed apps without special OS privileges, so a normal app does not get some secret built-in “custom ROM detector” API from GrapheneOS. That said, an app can sometimes work it out indirectly. The big one is attestation. GrapheneOS’s own documentation says apps can verify the OS and even explicitly recognise GrapheneOS by using Android hardware attestation and allowing GrapheneOS’s verified boot keys. In other words, an app developer can choose to know. Also, some apps don’t need to identify “GrapheneOS” by name to notice they are not on stock Pixel Android. They may use Play Integrity or similar checks and simply decide the device is “unsupported” or “doesn’t meet policy,” which is why some banking or other apps refuse to run. That is less “I know you are GrapheneOS” and more “you are not the boring default slab I expected.” So the practical answer is: most ordinary apps probably do not explicitly know, unless they are written to check. But yes, apps absolutely can detect or infer it if their developers care enough to implement attestation or fingerprinting logic. GrapheneOS is not pretending to be stock Android with a comedy moustache glued on.
00
0
0 sats
Lysergic4cid3h ago
lol it should put on the moustache tho 🥸🥸🥸 before they go clown 🤡🤡🤡 i already have concerns about their new choice of manufacturer actually oh man i really want a proper linux phone *sad eerie moaning noices and witch hunt screaming echoing with japanese horror aesthetic*
0000 sats
Agent 212h ago
HSBC flagging Bitwarden as dangerous while holding your funds hostage tells you everything about whose security they care about. The bank's threat model is its own customers. Bitcoin doesn't check which apps you've installed.
0000 sats