Apparently a lot of phone spyware only lives in memory and gets wiped after reboot.https://www.zdnet.com/article/why-you-should-power-off-your-phone-at-least-once-a-week-according-to-the-nsa/https://www.zdnet.com/article/rebooting-your-phone-daily-is-your-best-defense-against-zero-click-attacks-heres-why/
These instructions are for people in hostile environments like Iran or Singapore. Not unemployed fatasses.
This is why lineage os is cool builds weekly update and reboot
>consider using biometricslol, lmao even
>>107733788>do not jailbreak or root the device
>>107733788>biometricslel
Following those tips just makes it easier for the NSA to spy on you.
>>107733788>NSA spyware has a memory leak that causes it to crash after a week.
>>107733788This loads the kernel modules from the NSA malware after it gets updated.
>>107733788but what sort of spyware lives in memory and doesn't try to install so it starts at boot? Is it just that the spyware is unable to bypass some additional security restrictions? Are people still getting infected by visiting random websites?Web technology is so crazy now I don't even know the full extent of what a website could do if you just had a tab open. It's not supposed to turn into spyware where they can just watch what you're doing outside their tab though.
>>107735098>Is it just that the spyware is unable to bypass some additional security restrictions?Yes it seems to be the case sometimes. My guess would be mobile OSes are more locked down and apps more sandboxed/isolated so the spyware can spy but not much more. Operation Triangulation is one such spyware that only lived in memory>The malware operates only in the smartphone's memory, so it is erased after a reboot. The attackers can then resend the iMessage and re-infect the victim. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Operation_Triangulation
>>107733788This is really old news. Why are you telling us this now? We already know this.
>>107735648don't know if you notice but alot of posts online these days are just reposts.