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I recently acquired a pixel phone and set up gos. Prior to trying gos I was using an iPhone hardened as much as possible based off of recommendations and guides from respected OSINT experts.

It’s only been a week but I’ve found gos extremely frustrating and mostly useless except for web browsing.

I can’t seem to get my Yubikey to work so my 2FA is borked. Works fine on my iPhone.

I’ve previously managed to degoogle my life but now certain apps require me to use sandboxed google apps just to run.

I’m facing the nearly insurmountable task of convincing my friends, family, and colleagues to download and use signal when they are all using encrypted iMessage.

Most of my banking apps just simply do not work. Mobile banking is unfortunately something important that I need in my occupation. A part of the appeal of gos was being able to have an isolated dedicated profile for banking.

There’s also a few features that I’m assuming are iPhone exclusive that it really sucks to have without. Double tapping the bottom of the screen to shift everything down so you can reach the top of the screen with your finger when using one hand. Holding down on the space bar to move the text cursor between characters. Maybe these exist on gos though?

I understand most of the issues lay on the shoulders of the app developers. I’m grateful for the devs for creating and working on this project. I’m not bashing anyone here. I’m simply asking for some guidance on how I can break through the hurdles and make this work for me, from the mouth of those who were once in my position.

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[-] Prok@lemmy.world 37 points 1 month ago

Sounds to me like you want an iPhone... There's nothing wrong with that as long as you know what you're getting into which it sounds like you do...

A project like GOS will never have that level of polish and it seems like that's what you're looking for...

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 8 points 1 month ago

I really like mostly everything about GrapheneOS on paper. The UI, user profiles, security features. It’s the inability to use it in a practical setting that’s frustrating me. Yet I see many people claiming they switched to GrapheneOS a month or a year ago and love it. So there’s got to be a solution. I can’t imagine those individuals installed gos and it was smooth sailing since day 1.

[-] drkt@lemmy.dbzer0.com 22 points 1 month ago

The people who love GOS have different expectations than you. I, for example, come from a series of shitty modern dumb-phones, so being able to use a modern smartphone with all of its benefits without Google weighing me down is incredible.

I would probably also not like it if I was in the apple ecosystem. I would have higher expectations and it would be a downgrade in that sense.

[-] featured@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 1 month ago

As somebody who has used graphene for a long time, it certainly comes with sacrifices compared to stock android or iOS just by the nature of being a non-stock OS due to Google’s integrity stuff. The biggest thing I miss from my iPhone is putting my cards into my phone’s wallet and using tap to pay. Graphene can do concert tickets, boarding passes etc but not full GPay functionality. However that’s my biggest gripe. I still use iMessage for group chats that I’ve had for years where people won’t migrate; I host a BlueBubbles server at home and it forwards it all to my pixel. Never had a yubikey so I can’t speak to that issue unfortunately. I wish you the best of luck in finding workarounds or converting back, whatever is best for you. Remember that privacy is about balance; clarify your threat model and your social needs and work to find an appropriate compromise

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

I eventually managed to get the yubikey to work, although it is very buggy and the steps to get it working are unacceptable IMO for the "most secure phone OS". Hardware keys should be a major priority and should simply work just as easily as using passwords, but it seems to be a stale open feature request for a few years. Luckily for me, once bitwarden is authenticated with 2fa I don't need my hardware key unless I reinstall it. So that's one major hurdle behind me. Another plus is that while you need sandboxed google services to utilize hardware key auth, they don't need network permissions to work.

[-] Charger8232@lemmy.ml 21 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

Hello! I'm sorry to hear you are experiencing issues switching to GrapheneOS. I understand that can be frustrating, especially with how much of a privacy boost it is compared to iOS. I have used iOS my entire life, so I know it inside and out. When I heard about GrapheneOS over a year ago, I decided that I also wanted to switch. I spent multiple months learning everything I could about GrapheneOS and Android, just to give myself an idea of if I might like it. I even bought a $30 test Android phone to get familiarity with Android.

The thing is, I never expected it to be a one-to-one with iOS, and I expected issues to happen. I learned about potential issues and looked for solutions or forums where I can ask about such problems. I also spent that time (very) slowly convincing my friends to use Signal, but some still use iMessage. It's not an easy switch from iOS! With that said, I have a few things that may help you.

  1. Don't worry! Switching from iOS to any Android is difficult, and will take more than a week. You have to have the mindset of really making it work and making sacrifices. The thing is, even if it doesn't work, its ok to switch to iOS. Make a threat model. If iOS is what you're comfortable with, that's ok! We don't all have to use GrapheneOS

  2. Prepare Make a list of apps you will use once you switch, test out apps on an Android emulator or test phone, and see what works best for you. Not everything has to be open source, and some stuff will require Google. Tinker around and make a map of how you will set things up (apps, profiles, etc.) If you find that there are things you just can't live without, you can either switch back to iOS or have iOS as a secondary phone for those apps.

  3. Security keys If your security keys are causing you problems, consider one that acts over USB-C. If that still doesn't work, ask the GrapheneOS community for help at https://discuss.grapheneos.org/ You can still use iOS as a secondary device for logging into the services that you use security keys for.

  4. Degoogling Because GrapheneOS has such great sandboxing, using sandboxed Google Play is generally safe. It's still degoogled, but you ensure that any compatibility is met by isolating Google related things. You can even put those apps on a separate profile for further isolation. I know, it's uncomfortable to know something Google related is running in the background, but unfortunately that's the state of things. Some other custom ROMs have their own implementation of Google Play (See here)

  5. Contacting others I wasn't able to switch everybody to Signal, and for the ones I couldn't switch you can use a burner phone, MySudo, iOS as a second device, or https://jmp.chat/ to message them. In iOS 18, iPhones will also support RCS, meaning you can contact them with Android without using SMS. Again, this sucks, but you should take care of your own privacy and let them have their own journey.

  6. Banking apps Banking apps have been a common issue on GrapheneOS. Without specifics, I can't comment, but I suggest reaching out to their forum at https://discuss.grapheneos.org/ for help. If that doesn't work, use iOS as a second device for banking.

  7. iOS-specific features Android is not a one-to-one comparison to iOS, but what it makes up for is that any features you want can be quickly added by anyone. However, because the aim of GrapheneOS is a little different, it might be a while before user experience features are added. As for the keyboard, you can replace the default keyboard with ones that suit your needs. HeliBoard is a good one, although I don't know if it has the specific feature you described. These features may be a sacrifice you have to take, unfortunately.

Again, if GrapheneOS simply doesn't work out for you you can always switch back to iOS. Good luck!

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago

Most helpful comment. Thank you. I’m heavily considering carrying two phones. My biggest hurdle is the Yubikey at this point because it locks me out of my password manager and most of my more important apps.

You mention using the usb-c connection. I tried that but it doesn’t seem to register. I guess I just need to research some more.

Thanks for giving me some hope!

[-] Victorsigmoid@hachyderm.io 6 points 1 month ago

@brownmustardminion @Charger8232 I understand two phones one for work, one for personal, for example. But carrying two phones somehow for privacy doesn't make sense to me, they can easily be correlated as they appear together in multiple same locations carried around together so why go to the additional work of GOS and another phone?

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

Just for the sake of getting used to / transitioning to a single gos phone, does it make sense to use the insecure phone as a hotspot and utilize the pixel without a sim (so data only device). I would be using e2e encrypted apps for texts and calls so this makes sense in my head.

[-] Victorsigmoid@hachyderm.io 2 points 1 month ago

@brownmustardminion that's sort of the model the Calyx Institute recommends in some situations, the hotspot approach, I mean. Here's their site with more info, but the specifics of what procedures you need to follow to maintain privacy, for example don't use any of your phones at your own residence, seems beyond my needs/ threat model / tolerance for bother. #optout is another option. https://calyxinstitute.org/membership/internet

[-] Charger8232@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 month ago

If you want, you can port your Bitwarden passwords over to a different password manager such as KeePassDX, which also supports security keys. I'm not sure if this is a solution you want, but it might work!

[-] possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip 14 points 1 month ago

Just keep using your iproducts I guess. However, Apple isn't private and they do not respect your freedom.

[-] merde@sh.itjust.works 8 points 1 month ago

what's interesting about android is that you can tweak the device to your needs. You're not limited to the only solution your os designers/developers invented.

don't like the keyboard? install another one. You need a particular gesture or button? install it, modify it. change the launcher. change your app store

it's your first week and you're searching for all these solutions at the same time and it's probably frustrating. Give it some time and you would find them.

convincing friends and family to use signal is a challenge even for android users. (majority uses WhatsApp :/

[-] chevy9294@monero.town 7 points 1 month ago

Hardware tokens are handled by Google Services and not by Android itself :( That means you have to have Google Services installed if you want to use your Yubikey.

For banking apps I recommend to have in seperate profile (like you wanted) together with Google Services. You should also disable everything under Exploit protection section in settings for every banking app.

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 4 points 1 month ago

Appreciate the info.

It seems absurd to me that a third party online service is required for a hardware key to work in the first place. I figured it would be authenticating strictly between the locked service and the user.

[-] chevy9294@monero.town 4 points 1 month ago

Yep, its stupid. But its not online service, you just have to be installed and have file permission, thats it.

[-] jet@hackertalks.com 2 points 1 month ago

https://github.com/GrapheneOS/Vanadium/issues/61

looks like android 14 is the path forward here without requiring google play

[-] communism@lemmy.ml 7 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

I'm ngl this is surprising to me, as GOS has always just worked out of the box the way I wanted it to for me.

But:

I’m facing the nearly insurmountable task of convincing my friends, family, and colleagues to download and use signal when they are all using encrypted iMessage.

Anyone who uses Android will experience this. I've never owned an iOS device in my life and I've always used SMS and Signal to talk to people. Have occasionally downloaded WhatsApp when a group of people insists on using it and I need to communicate with those people, but usually WhatsApp is uninstalled when I don't need it. I think most Android users just use WhatsApp though.

Most of my banking apps just simply do not work.

Even with sandboxed Google Play? Again, surprising to me tbh. All the banking apps I've used in the past have worked fine on GOS without any Google Play services, though I don't have any mobile banking apps installed atm. I second the other commenter who suggested switching banks if that's possible for you.

There’s also a few features that I’m assuming are iPhone exclusive that it really sucks to have without. Double tapping the bottom of the screen to shift everything down so you can reach the top of the screen with your finger when using one hand. Holding down on the space bar to move the text cursor between characters. Maybe these exist on gos though?

I'm sure you're not the only person who's switched from iOS to an Android-based system and misses these features. A custom launcher might have the former feature, and there must be an Android keyboard that offers the latter. Maybe ask around on more mainstream Android forums, as they'll probably have the most people switching from iOS to Android.

No clue about Yubikey, sorry. Never used it.

If you want to use an iPhone, you can. You don't have to use GOS. I understand if you've invested heavily in the Apple ecosystem, it's just inconvenient to stop using it all of a sudden. Ironically I sort of experienced something similar in reverse when I tried to daily drive Windows for a brief time because of gaming, and I found it so frustrating to not have access to a lot of the programs I used on Linux, and how things worked so differently (and in ways I thought were much worse) on Windows. Not quite the same since there's definitely no such thing as a "Linux ecosystem" in the same sense as an "Apple ecosystem" (good! I don't want to log into my online Linux account to boot my kernel...), but big changes to your tech workflow will be frustrating as you build up a new system that works the way you like from the ground up. I don't think using GOS as a daily driver is a necessity for everyone. I would like to promote people using degoogled, FOSS, privacy-respecting OSes both mobile and desktop, but ultimately, you are an autonomous human being and can use iPhones if you prefer to do so and are fully aware of the privacy issues.

[-] ashaman2007@lemm.ee 7 points 1 month ago

My experience so far as a new user, which might be a little redundant but here goes:

  • Overall, there is a balance to work out between security, decentralization and FOSS, and anonymity.
  • for the average user, using sandboxed google play is pretty much essential. Otherwise you'll spend days trying to figure out why you aren't getting notifications, why certain integrations aren't working, etc. Notifications especially are just painful without google FCM. HOWEVER, I do not believe it is mandatory to sign in to your Google account for notifications to work, so you could in theory avoid signing in at all and still take advantage of FCM.
  • multiple profiles don't make sense for my use case (and possibly most people). Graphene does advertise the use case of having banking apps on a separate profile, but after attempting to do just that I believe it is a very niche use case that would actually benefit from it. Obviously a great tool to have for privacy and security, but not something you'll went to use everyday.
  • For the move away from Imessage, it is indeed kinda painful and still ongoing. The simple fact is that people are super weird about switching from I message, and honestly going straight to Signal was a no-go for many of my contacts. I've had to settle for WhatsApp, Telegram, and even Discord... I just have had to accept that the transition will take time. I've weighed that privacy issue against the privacy gain of GrapheneOS itself, and the benefits of supporting a 3rd party OS option, and I still believe using Graphene is better overall. And, once people get used to using a 3rd party app vs Imessage, in a couple years the jump to Signal will be no problem at all.
  • banking apps are super painful. That being said, here is an opportunity to vote with your wallet... Support apps that don't require invasive system access for "security". For me, the biggest eye opener was that there are NO GENERIC THIRD PARTY TAP TO PAY PROVIDERS IN THE US. It is only Apple Pay, Samsung Pay, or Google Wallet. And, as is pointed out on the Graphene user guide, 3rd party apps are allowed to implement their own NFC payment system, but the extremely vast majority simply choose to use Wallet or Apple Pay. This is obviously rather scary as more and more retailers use these systems, and I've realized I would gladly support and use any alternative at this point. Without Graphene, I would have never even thought about it.
[-] thayer@lemmy.ca 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

You'll need to provide specifics if you want solutions to many of these issues.

  • What exactly isn't working with your Yubikey?
  • Which bank apps? Did you check the compatibility list maintained by GOS?
  • Which apps aren't working without Google Play?

For the keyboard, there are several FOSS keyboards which support spacebar navigation, but you can also install Gboard and simply disallow any permissions, including network access.

Regarding Signal, this would be a reality for anyone with a non-Apple device. You may need to find a compromise and simply use SMS, RCS, or even just email when dealing with certain people.

There will always be one-off features available only on other devices or platforms. Only you can decide whether they are worth the cost of security and privacy.

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

When I initiate Yubikey auth via NFC in Bitwarden, it takes me to a Yubikey demo page. From what I’m reading online, for some reason I need to install google play for the key to work correctly.

Also seeing lots of chatter on the forums that a recent gos update broke most banking apps and they’re working on a fix.

Thank you for the info about the keyboard. I’ll check that one out.

[-] ninjaturtle@lemmy.today 4 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

From my experience, you have to use google services for the 2fa to work on Yubikey. You can work around this by using a TOTP and storing it on the key. There is a Yubikey app that can read the tokens that doesn't require google services. Another approach is make a separate profile that has a google account active on it and just keep those apps there to use the Yubikey on.

Some banking apps require extra work in their settings permissions to get them to work. Try turning off some of the extra security measures for app in the app permissions settings. See if that can get them to work.

Messaging is going to be broken unless both parties use an internet based messenger, like signal or iMessage. SMS is very restrictive. RCS may help fix this when it launched to iOS but it seems to break on graphene. Probably the same reason banking apps break.

[-] Zak@lemmy.world 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

If you want actual help with these issues, try the GrapheneOS forum.

I’ve found gos extremely frustrating

Some parts of this are probably unavoidable. High-security systems tend to be inconvenient, and using a non-mainstream operating system often means limited third-party support.

I’m facing the nearly insurmountable task of convincing my friends, family, and colleagues to download and use signal when they are all using encrypted iMessage.

For reasons I can't figure out, it seems Americans hate the idea of installing any third-party messaging apps. Most Europeans I know have at least two.

Most of my banking apps just simply do not work.

There's some information on the GrahpeneOS forum, but if the bank insists on using Google's device attestation, you may not be able to do much other than raise hell with customer service (please do this).

This is one of the reasons I run LineageOS rooted with Magisk; there's a bypass for Google attestation. That, of course does not have the same security-first goals as GrapheneOS.

Holding down on the space bar to move the text cursor between characters.

This feature exists on some Android keyboards including AOSP keyboard and Heliboard, which are open source.

[-] TragicNotCute@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Not the topic at hand but,

it seems Americans hate the idea of installing any third-party messaging apps

For me, I can talk to literally everyone I want to via the stock messaging app (iMessage in this case). I get no value from installing a second messaging app for a specific human or two.

[-] SexualPolytope@lemmy.sdf.org 5 points 1 month ago
[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 2 points 1 month ago

If iMessages are e2ee and you aren’t using iCloud, is there any evidence your messages aren’t private? As far as I’m aware iMessage is considered a very secure messaging channel. It seems like most people distrust it due to the Apple affiliation. Not that I blame them, I feel the same about Google.

[-] SexualPolytope@lemmy.sdf.org 6 points 1 month ago* (last edited 1 month ago)

You're right to feel the same about Google. Don't use their messaging services. The only way to get true privacy is through transparency à la FOSS software.

[-] featured@lemmygrad.ml 3 points 1 month ago

By default Apple holds your iCloud encryption keys. So if you message somebody who uses iCloud without advanced data protection turned on then that encryption isn’t worth a whole lot, they can unlock it and have given up that data many times

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

Good point. I'm aware of the icloud method of imessage cracking, but I often forget that I'm not always the weakest link; it's up to the people around you as well.

[-] Zak@lemmy.world 1 points 1 month ago

Has anyone you talk to regularly asked you to install a specific messaging app? If so, do you actually see a downside to installing it?

[-] zelnix@lemmy.ml 5 points 1 month ago

I use grapheneos. My yubikey 5c works fine for me. I can use it via NFC and when plugged in directly. Have you tried looking at the GOS forums for support?

With your banking apps try enabling the compatibility support mode in app settings. GOS adds additional security to apps which break some of the things bank apps use

Double tapping the bottom of the screen to shift everything down so you can reach the top of the screen with your finger when using one hand.

That's built into android including GOS but its not enabled by default. The gesture is a swipe down as opposed to a double tap.

Holding down on the space bar to move the text cursor between characters. Maybe these exist on gos though?

That's present on multiple keyboard options including heliboard, gboard and others.

[-] some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org 3 points 1 month ago

It’s only been a week but I’ve found gos extremely frustrating

Privacy and security are frustrating to implement and enforce. My work makes us repeatedly sign into services on a way greater frequency than I think is necessary and I hate it. But that's what a high level of security entails.

[-] brownmustardminion@lemmy.ml 1 points 1 month ago

I often wish all services could provide an opt out "I'm aware no 2fa is risky but I really don't give a damn about this account so fuck off with the constant email verifications". Or if companies insist on forcing 2fa, at least support hardware keys. Don't even get me started about banks...

[-] IllNess@infosec.pub 3 points 1 month ago

The iMessage issue, use RCS. You can still get messages, reactions, photos and animated gifs. Videos sucks though. Like really bad. Also no Facetime.

[-] possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip 2 points 1 month ago

RCS is Google and Apple specific

[-] IllNess@infosec.pub 3 points 1 month ago

You are completely right. No one else can use the API. I didn't realize that.

[-] 2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 1 month ago

RCS is a carrier protocol, like SMS

[-] possiblylinux127@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 month ago

Tell me how to use it without Google or proprietary software then

[-] 2xsaiko@discuss.tchncs.de 1 points 1 month ago

I don't know if there's anything ready for use, there's a library and demo app here: https://github.com/Hirohumi/rust-rcs-client

this post was submitted on 06 Aug 2024
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