My last phone (Nexus 4) was stolen. My new device, the Nexus 6, as you all know comes with enhanced security measures, requiring authentication even after a factory reset. Now, I had grown accustomed to playing around with wiping, rooting, custom roms, kernels, radios, etc with my Nexus 4. Now that I have had my Nexus 6 for a bunch of months, I am starting to think about rooting my device (so I can install an SSH server and have my phone automatically open a tunnel back to my server). My only hesitation is turning the OEM unlocking switch to on. See, I am a big fan of the new security measures that require authentication after a device reset, and would much prefer to keep that feature enabled. I've searched around on Google and XDA, and I haven't been able to find any definitive answers on how unlocking the bootloader in order to root the device will affect these security mechanisms.
My understanding is this: in order to root the Nexus 6, you need to enable OEM unlocking, which allows flashing pretty much any image onto the phone. If any image can be flashed to the phone, this security mechanism can be circumvented.
Two questions:
1. (pretty sure the answer to this is no) Can I root my phone and prevent flashing of images that would circumvent the security feature
2. Will rooting my phone make it easier for an unknown party to gain access to the device via another route
My understanding is this: in order to root the Nexus 6, you need to enable OEM unlocking, which allows flashing pretty much any image onto the phone. If any image can be flashed to the phone, this security mechanism can be circumvented.
Two questions:
1. (pretty sure the answer to this is no) Can I root my phone and prevent flashing of images that would circumvent the security feature
2. Will rooting my phone make it easier for an unknown party to gain access to the device via another route
Aucun commentaire:
Enregistrer un commentaire