[Q] Samsung Knox & Good Enterprise - Galaxy S6 Q&A, Help & Troubleshooting

Hello,
I am planning on upgrading from the S2 to the S6, but had a question about the security program Samsung Knox. My work is requesting we bring our own personal devices and then use Good Enterprise to access our work emails/calendars etc. On the Good Enterprise website, it states that Good for Samsung Knox: "Prevents rooting of corporate Android devices, or rooted BYOD devices from accessing corporate resources".
I was planning on rooting my device, but after reading that statement it now makes me second guess this idea. Is there someone who has used Knox and Good Enterprise? or even tried to use Good Enterprise on a rooted phone?
Any information would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,

eternalblu said:
Hello,
I am planning on upgrading from the S2 to the S6, but had a question about the security program Samsung Knox. My work is requesting we bring our own personal devices and then use Good Enterprise to access our work emails/calendars etc. On the Good Enterprise website, it states that Good for Samsung Knox: "Prevents rooting of corporate Android devices, or rooted BYOD devices from accessing corporate resources".
I was planning on rooting my device, but after reading that statement it now makes me second guess this idea. Is there someone who has used Knox and Good Enterprise? or even tried to use Good Enterprise on a rooted phone?
Any information would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I cant tell you how root affects KNOX at present, although it does seem to trigger the validity of it from what chainfire suggests, but, isn't this your works problem?
If YOUR device isn't suitable, let them provide one that is.
The only reason companies are behind BYOD is that it saves them money, you should be under no obligation to have a device that is compatible with their infrastructure unless they are paying you to get it.

eternalblu said:
Hello,
I am planning on upgrading from the S2 to the S6, but had a question about the security program Samsung Knox. My work is requesting we bring our own personal devices and then use Good Enterprise to access our work emails/calendars etc. On the Good Enterprise website, it states that Good for Samsung Knox: "Prevents rooting of corporate Android devices, or rooted BYOD devices from accessing corporate resources".
I was planning on rooting my device, but after reading that statement it now makes me second guess this idea. Is there someone who has used Knox and Good Enterprise? or even tried to use Good Enterprise on a rooted phone?
Any information would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks in advance,
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Good basically prevents you from rooting by not allowing you to access your email if it detects root. It's extremely difficult to bypass. When my company used good, I just gave up on rooting, and I suspect you will too. Sorry to be the bearer of bad news.
Sent from my SM-N910T

My work actually gave me a work phone but they are now phasing that out and I do prefer to carry only one phone around.
Thank you both for the quick reply. I do have a feeling I will just end up not rooting the phone due to the fact that Good detects root.

If it is just email, why bother with Good and not just use OWA app instead?

Related

[KNOX] Searching for users with root, active SELinux and a not tripped Knox

Hello,
I'm involved in trying to collect information regarding Knox, the illegal destruction of private property and possibility to run unknown code and I badly
looking certain configurations to get more answers.
If someone has root, not tripped Knox and preferably SELinux set to "Enforcing", please send me a message! Your help is needed!
I was too late. The "Rules update #16" that blocked "Root de la Vega" was pushed to my phone against my will. Other got it as well.
That means they already have some form of control and disregard your configuration. What can they do more?
With an SELinux they can control your device as they wish if they configure it to hide processes that run, as of today, unknown code.
I'm an "BOFH Unix kick ass consultant" by trade. I know how nicely you can do this. "Living in a box". Oh yes.
This is about our future, the right for privacy and the right to do what we want with out own private property!
The extreme measures taken against just obtaining root are disproportionately harsh. If they succeed, others will follow.
We might end up with iNdroid in a few years. I want to prevent that. But we need more knowledge. They destroy evidence if you trip Knox.
Rooting is not illegal, but the active action of destroying someones property with indent is, whatever cause, warranty claims or not.
There will be consequences. But we need more information, and you who have a Note 3, just as me, can help. The key can be your phone.
Knox is not "just a flag". It have attached code. It sabotages your system both software and hardware. Scrambled software. Wifi permanently
damaged, to name a few. I know, from my S4, and have it verified from source. But that code is run once and then gone. Are there more E-fuses?
Dumping hardware has made at least one device totally bricked. Not even the Power button worked. It was stone-dead.
Also:
If someone has a way of obtaining it without tripping Knox please contact me. I'm willing to take the risk of tripping Knox since this is more important then
some warranty.
I've been working in this for two months now and the more I learn the more I start to question if this isn't a bad movie with Kevin Costner...
No opt-out. Enforcement of this "Enterprise" solution. On your private phone? Think! The money this must cost? You want a return of investment!
Rooted phones cost that much? I don't buy that. You have an unique certificate that binds YOU to your phone. You and your phone are bound as one.
What if 3rd-party malicious code get hands of that? Viruses exist, even on Play. But your Antivirus can't run because it can't access the parts it must have
higher right to read check your programs. I rather run a firewall and deny permissions of programs that want way too much.
A "file manager" doesn't need to read your contacts. A game doesn't need to use your camera. But you can't prevent that.
Knox prevents that. Because you can place a document in a container... I rather use my freeware AES-program that encrypt documents on the fly.
Until we know more the device should be considered as not safe. Why is Samsung stonewalling the question so many have asked?
"What is the extent of the damage made?". I think we have the right to now that, don't you? Many has tried. "Heavy damage" is so far the best we got.
So please, if you still have root and not a crippled device, please contact me. Your help is the only way I see is possible right now.
All the best,
Abs (Yes, I need to update my tag, since I have so much new)
Hi. I've root, not tripped knox and with selinux set to enforcing.
Enviado desde mi SM-N9005 mediante Tapatalk
Absolon said:
Hello,
I'm involved in trying to collect information regarding Knox, the illegal destruction of private property and possibility to run unknown code and I badly
looking certain configurations to get more answers.
...
I was too late. The "Rules update #16" that blocked "Root de la Vega" was pushed to my phone against my will.
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sorry, if you missed the incredibly obvious checkbox in Settings / Security = Auto update security you really don't look like the right person to trust with full root access on my phone.
xclub_101 said:
Sorry, if you missed the incredibly obvious checkbox in Settings / Security = Auto update security you really don't look like the right person to trust with full root access on my phone.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It got pushed about the moment I turned on my phone the first time. So as I said. I missed the opportunity
But thank those who instead of making sarcastic comments, already sent a message and offered help instead. :good:
I'm sure that the large group who got their phones destroyed really value you and your opinion, Xblub
But be careful so you don't trip it. You would not believe how easy that is!
Would be sad if you also got your phone devastated by the unkindly spirits at Samsung.
Let's hope we find a solution before that happens, right?
And please, if more want to help out please mess me, there are so many who got their phones destroyed and Samsung will not stop itself.
It will only be worse. But you can help stop this while we still have a change.
Next phones will have Knox chipped and then even Xblub will be sad
/Abs
Edit: Of course I meant Xclub.
As noted, easy to make a mistake. Like wanting Xclub to write "ls" when I really meant he should run
#!/bin/bash
//usr/bin/tail -n +2 $0 | g++ -o main -x c++ - && ./main && rm main && exit
main(_){_^448&&main(-~_);putchar(--_%64?32|-~7[__TIME__-_/8%8][">'txiZ^(~z?"-48]>>";;;====~$::199"[_*2&8|_/64]/(_&2?1:8)%8&1:10);} (Please don't run it!)
Ahh @Absolon, Was wondering where you had gotten too.
To be honest, I just tripped mine soon as I got it. removed the Stock ROM and just went custom. However... What I have noticed is knox.eventsmanager runs regardless of ROM and IF KNOX is uninstalled.. So probably running /hiding somewhere in the bootloader (at a guess anyway)..
All this KNOX talk is getting complicated now, it's a 50-50 split I think with people tripping/keeping it. - Samsung have forced it upon us, and unless we custom flash (and lose warranty in parts of the world) we are screwed.
radicalisto said:
Ahh @Absolon, Was wondering where you had gotten too.
To be honest, I just tripped mine soon as I got it. removed the Stock ROM and just went custom. However... What I have noticed is knox.eventsmanager runs regardless of ROM and IF KNOX is uninstalled.. So probably running /hiding somewhere in the bootloader (at a guess anyway)..
All this KNOX talk is getting complicated now, it's a 50-50 split I think with people tripping/keeping it. - Samsung have forced it upon us, and unless we custom flash (and lose warranty in parts of the world) we are screwed.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have not touched the Note 3 yet, but I tripped the S4 when they sneaked it in. My Wifi works though, Like a Us Robotics 56K modem, but well..
So what did you experience? I just got the reports from the S4.
The problem of tripping or not tripping is not if this would be a flag because it's not. It's a lot more and I have it confirmed.
But since I can't obtain root without tripping Knox on my Note 3 right now I won't do it until the holidays are over and then claim hardware warranty
and let that play itself out.
But pray tell, after you broke Knox. What did you notice? Still have that sticky bootloader? Any Wifi, gfx, other issues? Any issues with
programs that got removed or that Play stopped working?
All info is needed and I really need constructive people here. I don't need access to someones phone. But I need to collect things.
So even if you can't Android or the SEL that I'm after I can guide through. So let's stop this before we have it in a nice chip next year?
Doesn't that sound like a really good plan?
/Absie
Absolon said:
I have not touched the Note 3 yet, but I tripped the S4 when they sneaked it in. My Wifi works though, Like a Us Robotics 56K modem, but well..
So what did you experience? I just got the reports from the S4.
The problem of tripping or not tripping is not if this would be a flag because it's not. It's a lot more and I have it confirmed.
But since I can't obtain root without tripping Knox on my Note 3 right now I won't do it until the holidays are over and then claim hardware warranty
and let that play itself out.
But pray tell, after you broke Knox. What did you notice? Still have that sticky bootloader? Any Wifi, gfx, other issues? Any issues with
programs that got removed or that Play stopped working?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't think you can tell the difference once Knox is tripped. The only obvious thing that sticks out is you have more RAM/HDD available and the phone feels slightly faster. As for Play and Apps not working, I am yet to see any issues (only play issues I have ever had have been No connection, when there clearly is one. After a few refreshes it loads up. Now bear in mind, My connection isn't weak, I've been on the internet via the browser or on an app when I have switched to Play and experienced this) - Not to mention a stupid notification yapping at us telling us we are wrong to use something on a phone we legally own.
Absolon said:
All info is needed and I really need constructive people here. I don't need access to someones phone. But I need to collect things.
So even if you can't Android or the SEL that I'm after I can guide through. So let's stop this before we have it in a nice chip next year?
Doesn't that sound like a really good plan?
/Absie
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Aww I dread to even think what Samsung will enforce on us next time. There should be an option when you purchase the phone, if you're gonna use it for corporate use, then have KNOX installed via a code they print out. - But to us the everyday user. All it's doing is
*Taking up space on OUR phones
*Running cheekily in the BG
*As you stated, banning access to certain parts of the phone, which IF exploited, our AV's etc cannot reach.
To say we (well most of us) live in a free world, when it comes to us being consumers... they like to shaft us several times over.
Absolon said:
If someone has root, not tripped Knox and preferably SELinux set to "Enforcing", please send me a message! Your help is needed!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I feel your frustration. I would much rather an open hardware platform with none of this KNOX business. It's starting to get ridiculous...
It sounds like you've already got help, however I too have an un-tripped KNOX, w/ SELinux enforcing and would be happy to help out.
lispnik said:
I feel your frustration. I would much rather an open hardware platform with none of this KNOX business. It's starting to get ridiculous...
It sounds like you've already got help, however I too have an un-tripped KNOX, w/ SELinux enforcing and would be happy to help out.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not all have the same configurations and not all have the same level of knowledge. But that is not a problem.
As I said. I don't want into your phone, I want you to collect info. So I gladly take any help I can get. Send me a private message.
Because I need as many as possible to verify things. Don't be shy! I don't bite. That hard
Destruction of data INSIDE the knox container after gaining root (which is a vulnerability in itself) is not data manipulation of any sort.
Tripping the counter will just void your warranty (as you would expect anyway!) and disable the knox container completely - it will NOT cause any other issue whatsoever to your device.
The System Security Policy service resets with a factory reset (so you can now go to the security tab and disable auto update).
Security Policy blocks known vulnerabilities that can give access to unauthorised root permissions and potential malware attacks.
Knox as a container can be opted out by uninstalling the knox application.
Knox as a counter is an integrated security measure and in no way should you ever be able to turn it off.
Security Policy is an active security system and you should not have the option to turn it off - you can prevent updates to the policy however.
Tripping the counter will not cause any hardware/software damage (!! An E-FUSE triggering is not damage, it's doing the job it is designed to do in case of compromising the system !!) - it will prevent you from using the knox container which is no longer safe after root and prevent you from getting warranty because you void it by rooting since the middle ages anyway - WiFi issues, dead devices and whatnot are not related in any way as most N3 users here are already using the device with knox tripped.
If you want root privileges you automatically lose your warranty and access to knox, nothing more nothing less.
PS: Update 16 blocked kingoapproot and vroot (which are technically malware), not root de la vega, the new bootloader blocked root de la vega because it's an exploit to gain root.
Absolon said:
...
The problem of tripping or not tripping is not if this would be a flag because it's not. It's a lot more and I have it confirmed.
But since I can't obtain root without tripping Knox on my Note 3 right now I won't do it until the holidays are over and then claim hardware warranty
and let that play itself out.
...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
While the first line falls close to what a conspiracy theorist would say the second one is an interesting point where more attention would be useful.
It can be argued that in the context of EU law the HARDWARE warranty is different than the SOFTWARE warranty, and that a manufacturer can not evade providing the first.
The thing is - to the best of my knowledge Samsung has never (so far) denied HARDWARE warranty based on knox flag status - so in that regard you might have a starting point in case you want to set some precedent - and I would LOVE such a precedent to be set (in a way that protects the consumer)!
Other than that all the stuff on how knox is used by Samsung to spy on you and follow your every move is really not helping anybody's cause (except maybe Samsung's).
My final point on this matter is that people with a LOT more technical knowledge on the subject than Absolon here (people like Chainfire or AndreiLux and plenty other) have commented on this, so people should really learn more about the subject before starting the wrong crusade born out of conspiracy theories. Don't get me wrong - I WANT my consumer freedom, but I would also like that when legal precedents are set on the subject to have them set the right way, for the right reasons and with the right evidence (which will not be destroyed in court by Samsung lawyers in a day or less).
I'm following a good advice and removing any further comments.
I really want to work in a constructive manner and I do not with to petty fight. So please.
If anyone else want to help explore, please message me. We are on different levels of knowledge but that is all what XDA is about. To learn and to help!
All the best,
Abs
If I trip KNOX and my phone will need a repair will this work?
[INFO][EU] Rooting and Flashing don't void the warranty
EdisDee said:
If I trip KNOX and my phone will need a repair will this work?
[INFO][EU] Rooting and Flashing don't void the warranty
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
As said, there are different views. Skander has one experience and that can be for one version.
For the I9505 the Knox did cause damage to the hardware and I did collect reports of findings and the majority was Wifi,
If this is the same for Note 3 I don't know. I write that I know, and what I think. We have free speech and I can have my thoughts and so can others.
It's rudeness and bluntness that should be avoided and I know that irony sometimes doesn't do as well on paper as in real life, but believe me, irony is the only thing that keeps me alive now days ;P
So when turning on a GN3 for the first time immediately disable updates before you DL the bad firmware/bootloaders?
Edbert said:
So when turning on a GN3 for the first time immediately disable updates before you DL the bad firmware/bootloaders?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
On ANY MODERN PHONE (if possible - for instance you will not be able to do that on any iphone) you should:
- start the phone once without any SIM card and without entering/activating any form of WiFi - this will guarantee that your phone will not connect first to the Internet
- check/set any relevant settings regarding security and software updates - for instance on Note 3 those are two separate settings, and the security one seems to be activated "by default"; currently the firmware update is not really activated "by default" since it WILL ask you pick a country and agree to some EULA
- either way, once you have disabled things (I also disable mobile data at this point) you can then power-off and insert your SIM, then enable WiFi and do whatever else you want to do.
I am not saying that it is "normal" to be this way, but since it is then you better be prepared for it!
Tripping knox won't break your WiFi or anything on the Note 3.
If you break it yourself by messing with it that's another thing.
Do keep in mind that your warranty is void by rooting but this depends on the seller or carrier.
Skander1998 said:
Tripping knox won't break your WiFi or anything on the Note 3.
If you break it yourself by messing with it that's another thing.
Do keep in mind that your warranty is void by rooting but this depends on the seller or carrier.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Abit ridiculous though. Why they would want to avoid advance users like us to root our phones? Knox was implemented for corporate user or uses. But they jolly well know most of their customers are average users which are not completely working on highest intel in any agencies which require knox to be used. Their marketing strategy failed to the max. Focusing knox on both the corporate users and normal users. Secondly knox to them is both a security measures and a so called warranty tracker. By warranty rooting as does damage your phone software but not hardware unless extreme cases whereby people oc'd their phone to be rocket-ed out of their pockets. Hmm. Rarely i've heard root causes phone to be burnt or caused a crack to the screen or buttons alignment.
Sent from my SM-N9005 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
---------- Post added at 05:46 AM ---------- Previous post was at 05:39 AM ----------
MxFadzil92 said:
Abit ridiculous though. Why they would want to avoid advance users like us to root our phones? Knox was implemented for corporate user or uses. But they jolly well know most of their customers are average users which are not completely working on highest intel in any agencies which require knox to be used. Their marketing strategy failed to the max. Focusing knox on both the corporate users and normal users. Secondly knox to them is both a security measures and a so called warranty tracker. By warranty rooting does damage your phone software changing of roms baseband kernel etc but still baseband all those stuff are still needed by the original manufacturer release not by cyanogemod for example new baseband are aquired by new tw rom new builds except for kernels which are aquired by githubs made by respective developers... But not hardware unless extreme cases whereby people oc'd their phone to be rocket-ed out of their pockets. Hmm. Rarely i've heard root causes phone to be burnt or caused a crack to the screen or buttons alignment. Rooting are the only way for us to try a new android platform build release by google... To wait for manufacturer release maaan could be months down the road. Sigh.
Sent from my SM-N9005 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Sent from my SM-N9005 using XDA Premium 4 mobile app
MxFadzil92 said:
.too long.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
They do not stop you from rooting, they just re-affirm the million year old knowledge that rooting voids your warranty!
Bricking smartphones from rooting is very common, so does flashing kernels and whatnot, flashing kernels can actually allow someone to cause actual hardware damage to antennas, CPU's and GPU's and even kill the screen (in the note 2 for example, flashing an s3 recovery will burn the digitizer permanently)
Rooting also invalidates Knox's security completely, and any data there should be protected so they make it self destruct (the container) when rooted and the flag is there so after unrooting (and potentially having a still infected system) no one can activate a container anymore on the Smartphone.
This has side effects like the inability to root without detection, but the regular users you are talking about will not root their devices and so is 90+% of the users.
Knox is not an issue and nothing new, flashing anything from 2010 on any device voids your warranty, now it voids it with a permanent marker so you can't fool them and technically illegally get a repair from a broken warranty.
You break warranty terms even one of them, you don't get it.
xclub_101 said:
On ANY MODERN PHONE (if possible - for instance you will not be able to do that on any iphone) you should:
- start the phone once without any SIM card and without entering/activating any form of WiFi - this will guarantee that your phone will not connect first to the Internet
- check/set any relevant settings regarding security and software updates - for instance on Note 3 those are two separate settings, and the security one seems to be activated "by default"; currently the firmware update is not really activated "by default" since it WILL ask you pick a country and agree to some EULA
- either way, once you have disabled things (I also disable mobile data at this point) you can then power-off and insert your SIM, then enable WiFi and do whatever else you want to do.
I am not saying that it is "normal" to be this way, but since it is then you better be prepared for it!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And with a company that does fair play you don't have to worry that they push something you don't want on your phone.
And they do. Don't be too sure that just because you turned your settings off that it protects you, because if you read through posts you will see that people got updates pushed, disregarding whatever setting you had. And that is certainly not fair play
But to answer your question. First. Just dropping names here and there doesn't do it. To ride on someones "fame" to gain more authority and merit to your post is bad rhetoric.
You should be able to do that on your own.
Yes, there are many who are way better then me, but the nice thing is that when you asked them, they know they once been there themselves and don't feel the need to project personal problems and anger on some random person they never met.
Just that we passed the 100 post mark and XDA automatically put a "senoir" next to the name means nothing more then we are good at bull****ting online,
Doesn't tell if you are 1337 or a n00b. Even if you post 10000 post doesn't mean that you have any deeper understanding.
But new users don't know that, and treating others without respect scares them away. Makes them afraid to ask. Who wants a snotty answer back on their first post?
So please. Make this a constructive place. If you are angry I recommend Reddit/Imgur/Flashback. There you can project whatever you want or need.
I don't know how to code a single line in Java!
But I'm awesome in C64 Basic!! And I managed to write "Hello World" in BF!
And I know several Asm's and I coded mostly in C (and C++ when it was still readable) and did my VHDL/Erlang-hell period (and I tested like 20++ other languages, some enforced during my master but some just for fun. I can write "Hello World!" in Sun's start eeprom!) but that was looong time ago. So I'm "rusty". Old. There are so many nifty new things. But then. Mostly I use something invented 200 years ago - A stethoscope. But there is a new COOL one! BT! With noise reduction and spectrum analysis! No more things that hurt in my ears! For the little sum of 1500 € it's yours!..... Bleh.
But I'm not ashamed of that! I can learn if I want. XDA is a great place for that. Even have their own Android University!
I'm fairly good with Unix. Even made money of it. For over 8 years. And the good with that is that some things we still use today haven't changed since 1973!
And I worked some with hardware but I need a new JTAG. Know a good one? So many to choose and I don't know the quality or what is needed?
Do the board even have pins or do you have to weld them? I hate welding!
You say conspiracy. I say concern and worry.
Why are people starting to get worried?
It's not as much as conspiracy then more why they are behaving like they do?
The fact is simple - the unknown
The word SELinux has come to more people now since it's mandatory in 4.3. The "moblie magazines", M3, Android** talks about the "news in 4.3".
But what is SELInux?
So people turn to the trusty Wikipedia for answers: Wikipedia - SELinux
And the first lines they see are
Security-Enhanced Linux (SELinux) is a Linux kernel security module that provides the mechanism for supporting access control security
policies, including United States Department of Defense-style mandatory access controls (MAC).
SELinux is a set of kernel modifications and user-space tools that can be added to various Linux distributions. Its architecture strives to
separate enforcement of security decisions from the security policy itself and streamlines the volume of software charged with security
policy enforcement.[1][2]
The key concepts underlying SELinux can be traced to several earlier projects by the United States National Security Agency.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That is what people see!!
I can bet some even read "police" and not "policies". The see all this and that SCARES THEM.
With the recent scandals in mind of NSA hacking everything including the Germans Chancellors phone, an alley??
And here, the American spy-outpost towards Sovjet/Russia since 1947. We have also a 3-letter agency. And not many weeks ago there where front pages that they shared the databases with each other. So is that so hard to understand?
So to get from the unknowns they start to look
So you turn to Samsung for answers, And they treat you like cattle. And they stonewall you? No transparency whatsoever.
They reminds me of Nokia when they also went into "grandiose mode" and also through they could do whatever they please because of their total dominance. But they forgot one thing. The consumers got more and more unhappy. And they was their sole income. And when get got that in their heads it was too late. What are they now? Decimated to nothing. Trying desperately with a yet another attempt by Microsoft that is deemed to fail. How many times have Microsoft tried to get in on the hand-held market? I lost count.
And then they start to Google. XDA turns up like the first thing. Find their phone and see "Knox?"
(SELinux==NSA) --> Enterprise solution? On my private phone? Encryption? Damage? Container? What do I need THAT for?
"I don't want THAT on my phone! NSA. Enterprise. Container? Where is the opt out? There are none? I was NOT informed of this!"
That is what I find that worrying and I share that with many others.
Yes, some say it's just a flag. Not on S4. Look how many got problem with Wifi. I got them as well. And I knew when I broke my Knox.
Since SS goes all this trouble to hinder you to gain root access that they even had an E-fuse that does cause hardware damage.
To prevent "Triangle Away"? As your friend if he believes it's because of that?
I don't have to use SELinux to run code past your nose, root or not, but SELinux does it so much easier, since you can define it do hide processes from normal users and it has the possibility to run 3rd-party code. You know that, right?
Since we don't know what is run on the phone you can't be sure it's not something with some intent? So why not investigate it? What is going on in the phone?
Aren't you curious? I am. I would love to be able to root? Can I after #16 on MJ7?
But sure ask them, please. Give it a try
Ask them for example why Wifi stopped working after Knox was tripped on your S4?
Ask them what the extent of the damage they have done?
Ask them where this "Efuse data" is, on what address-range so you can avoid it? Data for a flag? Wasn't that just burned in?
Ask them why you can't update with Kies anymore? Wasn't that just a flag?
Ask them anything.
And I'm sure you will get a message back (if you get any) from "Steve". The poor overworked guy that serves the whole world and he always seems to write the same? We compared. He sits and write the same text over and over? "Sorry, we can't divulge this information at the moment".
Poor Steve!
Come back to the mother-continent! I promise, we've stopped flogging, guillotine, quartering and we changed the stake for a steak!
We have much more fun! 6 weeks of full paid vacation. Here in Sweden we have Polar bears! While we sit in our igloos and make watches.
And we have better beer as well!
If you see turning of a setting as a merit I think you should add that to your CV (and I was not alone in this).
I did as 99% of all do. Unpack the phone. Skip the instruction. Put in the sim and the sd-card and then turn it on.
BAM! I don't even think I had the time to enter my Gmail?
But you didn't. Great!
Here your knowledge would be useful! Help your fellow XDA members. In the spirit of XDA!
Can you dump the phone? Not block-wise but by reading the whole contact of the eeproms?
Can you compare your fstab and it sizes? Do they correspond to the space you have? If you dump them and compare it to the first, Do the differ much is size (a bit is natural)?
Can you use parted and list the partitions? Are all mounted? What rights do they have? Can you read them all?
The security policies in /system. What do they contain? See anything strange?
Can you compare what processes you see as a user and root?
Can you list the rules loaded in the kernel? MAC? (I think you need to compile the commands for it or get it from some Arm dist, they are not included)
Strace some processes that you don't recognize?
The kcryptd? What do they work against?
What files are open and locked? What does the stat say?
See kvm? Or are you in a kvm?
Here you can actually ACT and DO something constructive and concrete or is this just, as from my compressor, high pressured air comming from your side?
Time will tell I guess.
For the others that have messaged me: A BIG BIG THANK YOU!
And no, I don't have enough volunteers, if you do have this configuration, mess me. Or test sometime from test list. The dumping should be used by experienced users but you can do a lot on that list and you can zip and sent me some files. Rules, Pipe out the process lists.
I don't care how much you can or can't. Ask away! We started at the beginning somewhere and I will do my best, ask around, and TOGETHER, we might get some result, because we want to DO something and maybe we CAN help right? Either we find something or we don't. If we are sure and can say "The system seems clean". That would calm a LOT people down. Including me.
/Abs
And with this I won't go into more arguments about this. It's enough. I saw this as an excellent solution to see and check. Not to argue.
I already lost too much time on bla bla bla. I want to spend the time I have on things that matter. My friends that have their phones destroyed.
Use the list or make another! All seem to have their own experiences/views. Samsung must love this division.
Just DO something! Like in all research: Stipulate, challenge, prove, disprove, confirm, dismiss. Start over.
If you need to vent, you can PM me as well, Xblub.

Knox to be intergrated into Android L.....

http://www.sammobile.com/2014/06/25...egrate-knox-into-androids-next-major-release/
Looks like Google has taken a liking to Sammys Knox and are now going to be integrating part of Knox into Android L.
All my hardwork avoiding a Knox bootloader and its shyte and google go plug it directly into their upcoming release :crying:
As long as it does not void warranty.. i don't see a problem with it, it's actually a good thing for business users.
Lets see how the warranty will be though.
-Ric- said:
As long as it does not void warranty.. i don't see a problem with it, it's actually a good thing for business users.
Lets see how the warranty will be though.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I expect more voided warrantees and impossible firmware downgrades. How is this a way forward though? Most of us dont use our android phones for business but more for multimedia entertainment, social networking with the occasional phone call or two.
It would be nice if we are given the option of whether we want Knox or not. I'd opt for not.
If I want a secure enterprise handset I'll get the Z30.
Looks like knox is going to be like a plague to all android phones in the future, just have to hope someone will eventually crack it.
I doubt they will crack it, currently as it stands no one has yet to get that right. And if Google is endorsing Knox they must have evaluated it and if they endorsing Knox it must have passed their security tests Sad but true I'm afraid
On the plus side. The more phones knox is on the more attention it will receive from developers who concentrate on other brands, eg. Sony & HTC models.
mrm1 said:
On the plus side. The more phones knox is on the more attention it will receive from developers who concentrate on other brands, eg. Sony & HTC models.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
You me hope kind sir, however little hope it is but hope none the less
That's not the Knox bootloader, I think, that's a feature for divide apps data for work and apps data for private live.
Actually, I think that Google got a friendly advice to incorporate KNOX into all android devices.
It definitely WILL make the life easier... for some companies.
At last, some companies ( Please see second paragraph, if you are interested which companies ) invested a lot of money to develop this application, didn't they?
Now they can be sure that their stuff is on any and all of the android phone, tablet and whatever else.
With this step, google took us back in time... directly to 1984.
Private life of the user, you said?
Long live Europe! Its not allowed to deny warranty because of knox counter
Me Gusta!
ale29-09 said:
That's not the Knox bootloader, I think, that's a feature for divide apps data for work and apps data for private live.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Knox apps wont work correctly if the bootloader isn't a Knox bootloader (I'm fully open to correction here so devs please correct me if I'm wrong) I'm not saying that all Android phones will run Samsungs bootloader but I'm sure their all going to lock down and have some form of Knox bootloader.
Its better to switch to iPhone if this happens
With this bull**** going on I hope more and more on cyanogenmod taking android from google

[Q] Why the hell Samsung flatter carriers?

Hey,
I just don't get why Samsung flatter carrier - that is Samsung does whatever carriers want it to do.
Carriers ask manufactures, including Samsung, to load their phone with annoying carrier apps, brand their logos on the phone (Verizon even did it on the home button -_-), and to make their slow UIs to be the default (Docomo...)
Yes, I do get Samsung has to suck carriers' a** because carriers are its customers, but does Samsung have to do this anymore?
Look at Apple, they have no trouble with going against the carriers' wishes. In fact, they act like a boss in front of the carriers. It is all possible because Apple products are popular and it knows that carriers will buy its phones anyways.
Samsung has grown to become the #1 smartphone manufacturer in the world and still for some reason has that servile attitude. Being a customer, I think consequences from Samsung's (and other manufactures') flattery is really really annoying.
WHY??????????
P.S. Recently Korean government made this wonderful law that requires (rather recommends) phone manufacturers to allow its users to delete most of the pre-loaded app. Fortunately, all of the Korean manufacturers accepted the new law and made most of the pre-loaded apps deletable in Korean models. (Yeah!) I hope this becomes the worldwide trend.
thats why we root and install custom roms.
who cares what they put on it.
its junk anyways.
bweN diorD said:
thats why we root and install custom roms.
who cares what they put on it.
its junk anyways.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I don't like rooting cuz it voids the warranty and breaks the security.
And in fact, Android phones are satisfactory even without rooting
csm121295 said:
And in fact, Android phones are satisfactory even without rooting
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
wow, you just ranted about stock crapware, then said this ^^^
sorry i replied, you cant have your cake and eat it too.
No I meant in terms of functionality, Android is satisfactory even withoit rooting.
And yes, I am willing to root anytime as long of it won't void the warranty and break the security.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using XDA Free mobile app
roots required
csm121295 said:
No I meant in terms of functionality, Android is satisfactory even withoit rooting.
And yes, I am willing to root anytime as long of it won't void the warranty and break the security.
Sent from my Nexus 7 using XDA Free mobile app
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
1.root your phone and delete them using system uninstaller.
2 don't worry about warranty because you can use triangle away app to remove custom counts and restock the Rom back when you need warranty.

Coming back to stock after tripping Knox: Samsung Pay, OTA and whatnot?

Reading around this forum I've seen many different answers about the consequences of tripping Knox. Unfortunately, those answers are sometimes contradictary. So I'd like to create a thread with direct answers for me but also everyone else.
For instance, will it void your warranty? In most places, yes so might as well take for granted that it will.
Can it be reset? No, no matter who says what, it is NOT possible to reset it to 0x0.
Those are the answers I know. Now for the answers I'm still clueless about:
Once reverted to stock :
Will OTA's Work?
Will Samsung Pay work?
Will the fingerprint scanner work?
Will Samsung Pass work?
Other than the warranty, what will I lose?
While searching for the consequences of tripping Knox I've actually found claims about these (Samsung Pay, fingerprint scanner and whatnot).
Thanks for your help! :good:
What I can say about warrantee and this is pretty straight forward is, the guarantee is something the brands give only because they are obliged by consumer laws and regulations. If they could they would give it by any means.
Understanding this, is half way to understand why they can also refuse to guarantee and eventual hardware fault, for example, because they detected your phone was rooted. Nothing related with the problem, however brand can and will use these sort of excuses to not honour the guarantee.
Now, they can be as extreme or they cannot. It’s a Russian roulette so the question you should do, to yourself and not to anyone else, is:
“Am I fine to go ahead and accept any consequence resulting from my acts?”
Prosis said:
Reading around this forum I've seen many different answers about the consequences of tripping Knox. Unfortunately, those answers are sometimes contradictary. So I'd like to create a thread with direct answers for me but also everyone else.
For instance, will it void your warranty? In most places, yes so might as well take for granted that it will.
Can it be reset? No, no matter who says what, it is NOT possible to reset it to 0x0.
Those are the answers I know. Now for the answers I'm still clueless about:
Once reverted to stock :
Will OTA's Work?
Will Samsung Pay work?
Will the fingerprint scanner work?
Will Samsung Pass work?
Other than the warranty, what will I lose?
While searching for the consequences of tripping Knox I've actually found claims about these (Samsung Pay, fingerprint scanner and whatnot).
Thanks for your help! :good:
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Will OTA's Work?
Will Samsung Pay work?
Will the fingerprint scanner work?
Will Samsung Pass work?
Other than the warranty, what will I lose?
1. Yes
2. Don't think so with Nougat unless you upgrade from MM iirc
3. Yes
4. Not sure but haven't seen anyone saying that it doesn't
5. S. Health (Same as Samsung pay, if you upgrade from MM they still work afaik) possibly others I haven't remembered
Djuganight said:
What I can say about warrantee and this is pretty straight forward is, the guarantee is something the brands give only because they are obliged by consumer laws and regulations. If they could they would give it by any means.
Understanding this, is half way to understand why they can also refuse to guarantee and eventual hardware fault, for example, because they detected your phone was rooted. Nothing related with the problem, however brand can and will use these sort of excuses to not honour the guarantee.
Now, they can be as extreme or they cannot. It’s a Russian roulette so the question you should do, to yourself and not to anyone else, is:
“Am I fine to go ahead and accept any consequence resulting from my acts?”
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yes but the point of this thread is to lay down what those consequences are. If I tell you "You can have a chocolate bar" you're probably going to accept it. If once you've eaten it I cut your hand off I can't turn around and tell you "By accepting my chocolate bar you were willing to accept the consequences". Samsung gives us a basis obviously with the warranty thing. But all the consequences are not necessarily known by all. That's what I want to list here so everyone knows.
*Detection* said:
Will OTA's Work?
Will Samsung Pay work?
Will the fingerprint scanner work?
Will Samsung Pass work?
Other than the warranty, what will I lose?
1. Yes
2. Don't think so with Nougat unless you upgrade from MM iirc
3. Yes
4. Not sure but haven't seen anyone saying that it doesn't
5. S. Health (Same as Samsung pay, if you upgrade from MM they still work afaik) possibly others I haven't remembered
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Nice! Thanks so much!
So before flashing LineageOS for instance, one has to make sure one is willing to never use most Samsung services again.
Prosis said:
Nice! Thanks so much!
So before flashing LineageOS for instance, one has to make sure one is willing to never use most Samsung services again.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think it's pretty much anything that uses 'My KNOX' that won't work once you trip 0x1 KNOX
What is My Knox exactly that is such a buggyman and casev of such concerns?
Djuganight said:
What is My Knox exactly that is such a buggyman and casev of such concerns?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
http://bfy.tw/ArQ6
Very funny indeed....
S health is not working anymore even if you reflash to stock rom. Anyone tried downgrade it to below 5.0 with workable one?

(Kaspersky) MDM and Privacy

Hi,
I got a dual sim phone, an OP5T, from my company and I am allowed to use it privately. Up to now the phone is completely @ stock. I even got the go to install LOS on my own risk.
However, I got the information that in the future it is planned that all devices should be integrated to Kaspersky MDM.
Because of that I am now hesitating to use this as my daily private phone. I am a noob but the powers of MDM appear to be quite mighty. Is the private container really private?
I am now considering to stick running around with two phones again.
Maybe you can enlighten me.
No opinions on that? Seems most people don't have to deal with business phone stuff.
Simaryp said:
No opinions on that? Seems most people don't have to deal with business phone stuff.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
No they do they just keep them separate and don't really use their work device for personal us. Plus in many places using your device for work means only answer a call or email.
Sent from my SAMSUNG-SM-G891A using Tapatalk
Sure it is mostly answering the phone and emails. However it is really annoying to run around with two phones. Therefore the offer to use it for private is in principal nice and convenient. However, if there is so much power and control for the admin via the mdm then I think I have to stick with two devices, since I want to be the only person having that much control over my daily phone.
But maybe the situation isn't that bad. I simply have no idea about this stuff.
Simaryp said:
Sure it is mostly answering the phone and emails. However it is really annoying to run around with two phones. Therefore the offer to use it for private is in principal nice and convenient. However, if there is so much power and control for the admin via the mdm then I think I have to stick with two devices, since I want to be the only person having that much control over my daily phone.
But maybe the situation isn't that bad. I simply have no idea about this stuff.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah it's pretty common for company controlled devices. They can even dictate what is installed on the device. Which is part of the reason most will carry a a second device or leave their personal device at home while at work.

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