Does it pass all of these?
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=gr.nikolasspyr.integritycheck
Does it pass all of these?
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=gr.nikolasspyr.integritycheck
Thanks for all the information.
It looks like Samsung with SamFW and CSC change is a viable option without rooting.
Do you remember if it’s a location accessible by all apps with permission, or a location private to the recording app?
I’ve seen both in recording apps.
Is it easy to copy all the files off the phone?
BCR is the best call recorder I know, if you are going to root your phone.
GrapheneOS has the problem as LineageOS.
Is it possible to automatically record all calls? And is it easy to copy all the resulting files off the phone?
Which country/CSC are you in? India?
SamFW is for Samsung phones, right?
What is the native call recorder like? Does it have an option to record all calls automatically? Is it silent to the other party?
LineageOS has native call recording.
The problem is that even without rooting, the Android integrity checks fail. Google is slowly closing the Android platform.
When I checked a long time ago, there wasn’t.
And not only failures, often it’s useful to get mail for all executions.
I guess cron continues to have its place.
Is there any easy way to get mail of the runs like with cron?
De facto standard for how to write commit messages (and thus usually changelog messages).
https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/git/git.git/tree/Documentation/SubmittingPatches?h=v2.36.1#n181
Valve hasn’t heard of imperative mood for changelog entries, it seens.
Everything except mobile support points towards Emacs org-mode indeed.
If you can find something even close to it, I would be interested to know as well.
Thanks for taking the time to write this!
Interesting, I didn’t know about that.
Do you use dropbear and manually input the password to unlock the LUKS partition, or have you scripted something to automate that?
Thanks for the comments. I agree on the general consensus, that once an encryption key enters the VPS, the encryption is compromised.
However, I’m thinking more in practical terms, eg. the service provider doing just casual scanning across all disks of VPS instances. Some examples could be: cloud authentication keys, torrc files, specific installed software, SSH private keys, TLS certificates.
Wow, I didn’t know reads deteriorate SSDs. What’s the reason? Is the rate significant?
Native call recording, as in included in the built in caller app. I think that’s the only way to record calls properly on Android after Google killed the APIs that could be used to make call recording apps before.