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drnick1yesterday at 9:59 PM3 repliesview on HN

> What do OnePlus gain from this? Can someone explain me what are the advantages of OnePlus doing all this?

They don't want the hardware to be under your control. In the mind of tech executives, selling hardware does not make enough money, the user must stay captive to the stock OS where "software as a service" can be sold, and data about the user can be extracted.


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jeroenhdyesterday at 10:28 PM

A bit overdramatic, isn't it? Custom ROMs designed for the new firmware revisions still work fine. Only older ROMs with potentially vulnerable bootloader code cause bricking risks.

Give ROM developers a few weeks and you can boot your favourite custom ROMs again.

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palatayesterday at 10:17 PM

> In the mind of tech executives

To be fair, they are right: the vast majority of users don't give a damn. Unfortunately I do.

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zb3yesterday at 11:40 PM

Note that Google also forces this indirectly via their "certification" - if the device doesn't have unremovable AVB (requires qualcomm secure boot fuse to be blown) then it's not even allowed to say the device runs Android.. if you see "Android™" then it means secure boot is set up and you don't have the keys, you can't set up your own, so you don't really own the SoC you paid for..

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