|
|
|
|
|
by realusername
1126 days ago
|
|
> What if a genuine part is modified. I am not sure it is a solvable problem? Same problem as it is now, nothing changes. > However if you are a phone, how would you distinguish between a legitimate repair and malicious swapping out of parts? Sounds like incompleteness theorem would say you can't If your threat model is malicious swapping parts, an iPhone isn't for you anyway, you need a device more secure than that. And I doubt that applies to more than an handful of individuals, even targeted attacks themselves usually don't go this far and prefer to just exfiltrate the data by software. |
|
Now the phone warns you about a replaced part. Even if it is a genuine one.
> If your threat model is malicious swapping parts, an iPhone isn't for you anyway, you need a device more secure than that.
This is a thread model of many people in many countries today. Sorry for stupid question but is there a usable phone that is more secure, seriously?