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SchemaLoadlast Thursday at 10:37 PM5 repliesview on HN

There is immense pressure to stop online scams which are draining old people of their life savings. The whole flow from the article seems entirely based around letting power users install what they want while being able to break the flow of a scammer guiding a clueless person in to installing malware.

It is promising that Google has avoided just turning off sideloading but still put measures in place to protect people.


Replies

BatteryMountainyesterday at 10:32 AM

Why can't a bank put a lock on large transfers or have an extra verification step? Or a cooldown period, so that if they see a large transfer from people above 60, let them go to a branch to verify/ack the transaction. Why is this the internet or operating systems problem to solve?

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spaqinyesterday at 5:18 AM

I've never seen any news about such scams with actual malware that can break through Android's sandbox system - as we're still assuming a rootless systems. In most cases it's pig butchering, phishing, cold calls that make the person use the official app to transfer money to an account they're told to.

This stops nothing of the sort.

bhhaskinlast Thursday at 11:33 PM

Why is it on Google to stop this and not the banks?

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ipaddryesterday at 4:07 PM

None involve installing an app from a non app store.

johnnyanmacyesterday at 1:08 AM

>There is immense pressure to stop online scams which are draining old people of their life savings.

From who? I'd rather have this done by a regulated service like a bank than a private corporation with a perverse incentive. Frauds and scams are already illegal.

That't the similar narrative to "think of the children". They want to act as this middleman and secure their place, all while having unfettered access to people's data.