A couple things.
http://m.gizmodo.com/5863849/your-android-phone-is-secretly-recording-everything-you-do
I can't remener if that was in this. But I found an app that when rooted
will scan you phone for some of this.
TrevE_Logging_TestApp_v7.apk
I still have to suggest CyanogenMod it really is n
I would like to know, with this coming to light, can those of us with a phone
that has the software installed "legally" break the contract with the company
we are in?
Granted, I rooted my Galaxy S and installed Cyanogenmod about 2 hours after I
got the phone, I would break the contract and swit
Once it's auto-updated itself to Android 2.3, the G2 is a stone-cold
bitch to root. There's a full firmware update involved that does it's
absolute best to block you.
Jim
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 3:18 PM, Stephen wrote:
> The G2 isn't that bad. and Cyanogen runs well on it. friend of mine
> did t
The G2 isn't that bad. and Cyanogen runs well on it. friend of mine
did that till he got fed up with T-Mobile service
On Thu, Dec 1, 2011 at 2:51 PM, Jim March <1.jim.ma...@gmail.com> wrote:
> It still appears to be the most systematic violation of Federal
> wiretapping by a non-governmental par
It still appears to be the most systematic violation of Federal
wiretapping by a non-governmental party ever. Lawsuits are absolutely
certain.
Just for starters they recorded and transmitted usernames and
passwords for encrypted web-services like gmail - in the clear.
I'm trying to figure out no
what about this ? i just figure there is no such thing as 'security' on
a public device anyway. and if i got paranoid i could root the phone and
install cyanogenmod.
http://gizmodo.com/5863849/your-android-phone-is-secretly-recording-everything-you-do
--
betty i.
www.webcanine.com
information