Hey , finally i get my S7 and after configuring it i noticed that there is no more reactivation lock function in find my phone settings ? Why samsung removed it ? It was on galaxy S6 but now its gone
szychor said:
Hey , finally i get my S7 and after configuring it i noticed that there is no more reactivation lock function in find my phone settings ? Why samsung removed it ? It was on galaxy S6 but now its gone
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
That's because with device encryption this feature is now handled directly by Google, you can enable/disable it in tnt developer options (allow OEM unlock).
There is no point in having the same protection twice, so Samsung has removed their own to prevent redundancy.
Also if you factory reset your phone from the recovery with the OEM unlock off, you will be locked out of your device for 72hrs so be careful.
Envoyé de mon SM-G935F en utilisant Tapatalk
What is the oem lock for exactly
Samsung reactivation lock vs google Factory Reset Protection(FRP)
Samsung reactivation lock was very secure & easy to setup.When it is on, no one can neither factory reset (both from phone setting & recovery mode) nor install new firmware through odin. Samsung has removed the feature in samsung galaxy s7. Is Factory Reset Protection(FRP) introduce by google provide the same level of security? what happen when phone is not set lockscreen protection & someone enable oem unlock & then factory reset or flash the firmware through odin?
binayakc said:
Samsung reactivation lock was very secure & easy to setup.When it is on, no one can neither factory reset (both from phone setting & recovery mode) nor install new firmware through odin. Samsung has removed the feature in samsung galaxy s7. Is Factory Reset Protection(FRP) introduce by google provide the same level of security? what happen when phone is not set lockscreen protection & someone enable oem unlock & then factory reset or flash the firmware through odin?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I have exactly the same question!
dunkel_Stern said:
I have exactly the same question!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Me, too!
Oem unlock is for thebm bootloader and has nothing to do with frp, that option allow you to do some stuff in download mode
mathieulh said:
That's because with device encryption this feature is now handled directly by Google, you can enable/disable it in tnt developer options (allow OEM unlock).
There is no point in having the same protection twice, so Samsung has removed their own to prevent redundancy.
Also if you factory reset your phone from the recovery with the OEM unlock off, you will be locked out of your device for 72hrs so be careful.
Envoyé de mon SM-G935F en utilisant Tapatalk
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey friend what kind of lock is this?????
blackwing182 said:
Oem unlock is for thebm bootloader and has nothing to do with frp, that option allow you to do some stuff in download mode
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hey friend do you know what is this??????
chuckboy1129 said:
What is the oem lock for exactly
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It's for deterring mobile theft.
Previously, people would steal a mobile phone, throw the original SIM Card away, and resell them. The buyer would then put in their SIM Card and go about their way.
Android tries to prevents this kind of theft by making the phone aware of a SIM Card replacement and then locking the phone asking for the previously installed Google account password, which the thief nor the buyer would know. By doing this, Google is hoping that thiefs would soon stop stealing Android mobile phones since they can't use/sell them anyway.
Thief starts getting creative by reflashing everything, negating the Google account password requirements.
Samsung starts locking the device if it detects such tamper. The detection itself can be bypassed by allowing OEM Unlock (Which some of us tinkerer mistakenly forgot and got locked out of our own device upon shutdown/reboot. It's solvable, but requires a wipe, therefore securing user data from theft's eyes.).
rosel11078 said:
Hey friend what kind of lock is this?????
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Unfortunately, the phone has been reported as stolen and being blocked. You can call the printed number to confirm your purchase along with the invoice if possible.
This is the source of your device : https://www.rentacenter.com
Related
Can I activate "reactivation lock" after I flash the stock ROM? I have a Custom ROM now so I disabled it. Soo,is it ok if I activate it after I flash stock?
can somebody explain, if I root phone and install custom rom, then reactivation lock do not work and if I lose or will stolen phone, I can't remotely delete all info and other user can re-flash new rom and use a phone, correct?
paulyz said:
can somebody explain, if I root phone and install custom rom, then reactivation lock do not work and if I lose or will stolen phone, I can't remotely delete all info and other user can re-flash new rom and use a phone, correct?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Reactivation lock only prohibiting others from wiping, resetting, flashing the phone. You can still wipe the phone remotely if you have samsung account registered in the phone. And if the phone is connected to internet. Not sure if google account could do so as well.
Sent from my SM-G925F
so, with rooted phone samsung account work and you can wipe remotely all your information? In custom lock you can't tur on reactivation lock? But if you phone encrypted, nobody can get data, correct? they just can flash new rom, but I could block phone by IMEI.
paulyz said:
so, with rooted phone samsung account work and you can wipe remotely all your information? In custom lock you can't tur on reactivation lock? But if you phone encrypted, nobody can get data, correct? they just can flash new rom, but I could block phone by IMEI.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Not really sure. Never use it. Phone can still be flashed but the information of your accounts are still there so no use, except there is workaround to bypass the lockscreen to disable reactivation lock.
Sent from my SM-G925F
Rosli59564 said:
Not really sure. Never use it. Phone can still be flashed but the information of your accounts are still there so no use, except there is workaround to bypass the lockscreen to disable reactivation lock.
Sent from my SM-G925F
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
if i googled good, this only in LP, in MM I don't found info about it, maybe, samsung fixed this in MM
So recently I have gotten a Note5 , which my friend has had sitting around and I bought it off him but he had forgotten his home password. So I did a Factory Reset but didn't know his old email and now I have tried bypassing the FRP method but none seem to work. It would be very grateful if someone can help me and.......... Also would flashing it back to its original image 5.1.1 help delete the FRP LoCK? :crying::
Turn on OEM Unlock in Developer Options...
sinisin said:
Turn on OEM Unlock in Developer Options...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
How can he do that if he cant get past frp lock?
I am curious myself to see how thTs done
isn't that there's a way to bypass it by connecting phone to computer and run sidesync on the computer?
....
Not sure if this method still works but that's how I bypassed a samsung core prime last month.
Also you need to list what methods you used so others can see what you used and see if they have any new ideas.
He needs to restore a back up, or reflash a stock tar. There are literally 10 threads on this. FRP only shows up when someone who has rooted turns off OEM Unlock. I know, cuz I did. Flashing stock tar or a backup will either allow the software to bypass the lock, or restore software that has OEM Unlock turned on..
Hi,
I have a few questions about the FRP lock and the OEM lock on the Galaxy s6 running Nougat. I hope someone can help as I've not been able to find answers to questions this specific.
Ok, so, my first question is does the Galaxy s6 even have an OEM unlock option? If so, is it enabled by default?
Quick story before the other questions. I flashed TWRP and the sorts onto my s6 but decided to go back to stock and so flashed the stock firmware from sammobile through odin mode. After doing so I assumed the stock recovery would be restored and the phone would be as good as new right? As in all the FRP and OEM lock security features would be restored?
However, I did some research and found out that you can flash the stock firmware AGAIN as long as the firmware was signed by samsung even if OEM unlock is not checked.
My last question would be if someone was to use odin mode to flash the stock firmware, which is freely available, would the phone not ask for the previous Google account which was signed in on the device?
Hope is wasn't too hard to understand, I'm typing on my old S3 mini as I lost my s6 which is the reason I can't go and test this myself.
Thanks in advance
- There's no OEM lock on S6 (at least on international models). So, there is no OEM unlock option.
- If the bootable images (kernel and recovery) on your phone is Samsung signed, you can use FRP.
- If you want to revert the device to completely stock, I recommed that you should install a 4-part firmware.
- If FRP lock is not enabled on your device, phone won't ask anything about Google account (or Samsung account).
forumber2 said:
- There's no OEM lock on S6 (at least on international models). So, there is no OEM unlock option.
- If the bootable images (kernel and recovery) on your phone is Samsung signed, you can use FRP.
- If you want to revert the device to completely stock, I recommed that you should install a 4-part firmware.
- If FRP lock is not enabled on your device, phone won't ask anything about Google account (or Samsung account).
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Hi,
Thanks for the informative reply. I have just one more question.
If I had enabled FRP through the Samsung Pass settings with my Samsung account and then I was to flash stock firmware on to the phone, would the Samsung FRP lock prevent the user from using the device by asking for the email and password or would the new firmware get rid of any of the security measures put in place?
I understand the FRP lock files are stored on a hidden partition not wipeable through the stock recovery however considering signed firmwares are freely available it would seem to me that the FRP lock would be deemed useless if anyone could just do that.
I guess my final question would be do signed firmwares downloaded online and flashed over the existing firmware wipe the FRP lock partition of the phone?
Thanks again for your reply
Haroon786 said:
Hi,
Thanks for the informative reply. I have just one more question.
If I had enabled FRP through the Samsung Pass settings with my Samsung account and then I was to flash stock firmware on to the phone, would the Samsung FRP lock prevent the user from using the device by asking for the email and password or would the new firmware get rid of any of the security measures put in place?
I understand the FRP lock files are stored on a hidden partition not wipeable through the stock recovery however considering signed firmwares are freely available it would seem to me that the FRP lock would be deemed useless if anyone could just do that.
I guess my final question would be do signed firmwares downloaded online and flashed over the existing firmware wipe the FRP lock partition of the phone?
Thanks again for your reply
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Phone will ask Samsung or Google account only if you wipe the data (we assume that FRP lock has been enabled before wiping the data).
If you don't wipe the data while flashing any firmware while installing (or the firmware you try to flash doesn't wipe the data), phone won't ask you anything.
And, if FRP lock enabled on the device, bootloader will deny to boot (or flash) the unsigned kernel or recovery.
There's no way to wipe FRP lock via Odin.
So, we can say that FRP lock is pretty secure.
Yeah
But u can easy **** with samsung when u flash stock 5.0 with odin and on pc have sidesync or someting like that samsung suck because with that tutorial u can bypass frp really easy
JirkaPirkl said:
But u can easy **** with samsung when u flash stock 5.0 with odin and on pc have sidesync or someting like that samsung suck because with that tutorial u can bypass frp really easy
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
:/
well here's hoping a typical phone thief doesn't know how to do that....
Quick question though, can an S6 be factory restored if the user only used the phone's PIN from the lock screen to the factory reset option in the settings app? Or would you be prompted to use your fingerprint? I read somewhere that factory restoring a device through the settings app disables the innate android FRP but i don't know if it's also the case with Samsung reactivation lock which is supposedly similar to FRP.
Thanks for the replies I appreciate it
Read on the way out from house !!!
Sorry for my bad but im now on the way but 1 yeah u will need maybe fingerprint for turn off reactivation ( frp) but first when u lost your phone use samsung accound on the browser for track lock etc 2 for factory reset u need only turn off phone and go to the recovery mode
I got S7 SM-G930L with a port Rom from S8 (https://forum.xda-developers.com/s7-edge/development/rom-s8-port-s7-s7-edge-ambasadii-t3619548). When I power on the phone I get a message: Custom binary blocked by FRP Lock.
I would like to get rid of the FRP Lock without losing my data.
I saw a video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdAhu45UPsU According to the comments 40% lost their data and 60% didn't.
Could you please advise how to make sure that my data won't be lost?
Blackion said:
I got S7 SM-G930L with a port Rom from S8 (https://forum.xda-developers.com/s7-edge/development/rom-s8-port-s7-s7-edge-ambasadii-t3619548). When I power on the phone I get a message: Custom binary blocked by FRP Lock.
I would like to get rid of the FRP Lock without losing my data.
I saw a video https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VdAhu45UPsU According to the comments 40% lost their data and 60% didn't.
Could you please advise how to make sure that my data won't be lost?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If there's an option for OEM Unlock in developer settings enable that to disable FRP
But how do I boot my phone? Now I'm getting a red message: Custom binary blocked by FRP Lock and the phone is not booting past that. It will not even let me in TWRP.
Blackion said:
But how do I boot my phone? Now I'm getting a red message: Custom binary blocked by FRP Lock and the phone is not booting past that. It will not even let me in TWRP.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
reflash the stock fw using odin
Not sure
I was said that because I'm using a port of S8 on S7, after I'll reflash stock ROM the data might be lost due to differences of memory formats.
Is it true?
Blackion said:
I was said that because I'm using a port of S8 on S7, after I'll reflash stock ROM the data might be lost due to differences of memory formats.
Is it true?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
If you haven't backed up your data, it will be lost.
When you get yourself back out of this mess, don't touch that OEM unlock toggle again...
Blackion said:
But how do I boot my phone? Now I'm getting a red message: Custom binary blocked by FRP Lock and the phone is not booting past that. It will not even let me in TWRP.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
(sorry for the english but i'm italian) hi. i have the same problem, can you help me? i root my phone and after i unroot, but now the phone don't boot, it say custom binary blocked by frp, i understand that my bootloader is lock by oem, there is a way to unlock by odin or others method? i can't have access to recovery and the phone don't boot, what can i do?
corvasce03 said:
(sorry for the english but i'm italian) hi. i have the same problem, can you help me? i root my phone and after i unroot, but now the phone don't boot, it say custom binary blocked by frp, i understand that my bootloader is lock by oem, there is a way to unlock by odin or others method? i can't have access to recovery and the phone don't boot, what can i do?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I used smartswitch when I encountered frp lock
https://www.blogtechtips.com/2017/06/24/easily-restore-samsung-device-firmware-with-smart-switch/
1eStar said:
If you haven't backed up your data, it will be lost.
When you get yourself back out of this mess, don't touch that OEM unlock toggle again...
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@1eStar
Firstly I have a question regarding the OEM unlock as I just came out of the FRP Lock. Do I turn on OEM unlock or does it have to be turned off? Last time I had this FRP Lock was a year ago though did it again(the mistake with the OEM unlock) as I had forgotten it(Lots of grey hair)
Just don't know if it has to be on or off?
Secondly I have managed to come out of it(so far , hopefully) without wiping data with this guide
kiwigi said:
@1eStar
Firstly I have a question regarding the OEM unlock as I just came out of the FRP Lock. Do I turn on OEM unlock or does it have to be turned off? Last time I had this FRP Lock was a year ago though did it again(the mistake with the OEM unlock) as I had forgotten it(Lots of grey hair)
Just don't know if it has to be on or off?
Secondly I have managed to come out of it(so far , hopefully) without wiping data with this guide
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
To unlock your device by frp lock you must flash the stock firmware when you are in bootloader mode you see custom binary blocked by frp,if you try to flash a random firmware(always of your device) the operation may not be a good end and device say an error with this:
Knumber) Snumber) Bnumber)
When you go to download the stock firmware you must see the "code" Of the firmware with write the same S or B number
If you Don't understand see the 10th post of this thread
https://forum.xda-developers.com/galaxy-s8+/help/custom-binary-blocked-frp-lock-regular-t3745085
corvasce03 said:
To unlock your device by frp lock you must flash the stock firmware when you are in bootloader mode you see custom binary blocked by frp,if you try to flash a random firmware(always of your device) the operation may not be a good end and device say an error with this:
Knumber) Snumber) Bnumber)
When you go to download the stock firmware you must see the "code" Of the firmware with write the same S or B number
If you Don't understand see the 10th post of this thread
https://forum.xda-developers.com/galaxy-s8+/help/custom-binary-blocked-frp-lock-regular-t3745085
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
@corvasce03
Thanks.
I think I got back allright except this here and I used exactly the same stock(file) as a year ago
Someone Help My Soul!!!
Guys, I'm scared to death on letting my phone reboot, I have been told to never let my phone restart unless my google account has been removed, can someone please explain how this FRP block really works?
Am I at risk at every given point of phone restart for real?
Cirphrank said:
Guys, I'm scared to death on letting my phone reboot, I have been told to never let my phone restart unless my google account has been removed, can someone please explain how this FRP block really works?
Am I at risk at every given point of phone restart for real?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
It stops someone stealing your phone, wiping it, installing new firmware and using it as if it was new. If you know the gmail and password you put on the phone to access the play store then you just need to re-enter it after the phone restarts. FRP will only kick in if you have flashed new firmware to the phone.
I have a new firmware flashed on the phone.
And I'm using a new gmail with is, not some one July bro used on it.
What am I to do now? I have developer settings OEM unlock toggled on already.
Cirphrank said:
And I'm using a new gmail with is, not some one July bro used on it.
What am I to do now? I have developer settings OEM unlock toggled on already.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I'm not sure what you mean. If you have a Google account on the phone that you know the email and password to, then just reboot the phone. FRP lock will only activate if you flash new firmware to the phone without removing the Google account first.
Your device should only have 1 Google account registered on the device which let's you access Play store etc. If there is more than one, you need to delete the ones you don't know the email and password to.
Okay...
Oh, okay, now I am getting the rationale.
Albeit, when I flashed in the new custom firmware, it started give me the undo changes by restarting your phone notification, like it did the first time ever that I got the lock. I didn't click it, activated an app that discarded the notification rather.
Now it makes me doubt if I had really removed my mail before flashing the phone.
hey
i have got the same problem. when i deleted xposed installer, my device rebooted. every time i try to turn it on, it says in top left corner 'custom binary blocked by frp lock'. i tried 3 diff rom to flash, no succes. i tried to acces twrp (my device is rooted) but again no succes. can you guys help me?
i have a G930F
thanks.
stasikkk777 said:
i have got the same problem. when i deleted xposed installer, my device rebooted. every time i try to turn it on, it says in top left corner 'custom binary blocked by frp lock'. i tried 3 diff rom to flash, no succes. i tried to acces twrp (my device is rooted) but again no succes. can you guys help me?
i have a G930F
thanks.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Yeah you've messed it up by not signing out of account before unistalling xposed. When you say 3 different rom's do you mean stock or custom?
Even in this state you should be able to flash a stock rom to the device with Odin and it will ask you to type the google email and password after boot.
Always turn off FRP lock before modifying the phone, it's a really annoying feature.
i've read a blog post somewhere which talks of the possibility to lock a sumsung download mode, how can this be done or undone?
thelite said:
i've read a blog post somewhere which talks of the possibility to lock a sumsung download mode, how can this be done or undone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Can you provide more details?
The bootloader lock prevents flashing and booting of unsigned images. With a locked bootloader, download mode does not accept custom software; all software packages must be OEM signed.
An unlocked bootloader (with Knox Guard disabled) will allow flashing custom firmware, such as TWRP recovery.
So, in that sort of sense, I suppose the bootloader lock does control what download mode will accept via Odin.
V0latyle said:
Can you provide more details?
The bootloader lock prevents flashing and booting of unsigned images. With a locked bootloader, download mode does not accept custom software; all software packages must be OEM signed.
An unlocked bootloader (with Knox Guard disabled) will allow flashing custom firmware, such as TWRP recovery.
So, in that sort of sense, I suppose the bootloader lock does control what download mode will accept via Odin.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
im on the sumsung galaxy a032F, there is no oem unlock in developer options so i guess i cannot unlock the bootloader, and when i try to flash a custom firmware via odin i get an error mdm mode can't download odin. so after reading the blog post i was wondering, could the download mode be locked
thelite said:
im on the sumsung galaxy a032F, there is no oem unlock in developer options so i guess i cannot unlock the bootloader, and when i try to flash a custom firmware via odin i get an error mdm mode can't download odin. so after reading the blog post i was wondering, could the download mode be locked
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
im a newbie and i could be wrong about all this, but its been 2 days and googling has not hepled
thelite said:
im on the sumsung galaxy a032F, there is no oem unlock in developer options so i guess i cannot unlock the bootloader, and when i try to flash a custom firmware via odin i get an error mdm mode can't download odin. so after reading the blog post i was wondering, could the download mode be locked
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Ah, ok. That makes a little more sense.
The bootloader has to be unlocked in order to flash custom firmware.
The process works like this:
Turn on OEM Unlocking in Developer Options (allows bootloader to be unlocked)
Boot device into unlock mode - starting with device off, hold both Volume buttons and plug in USB cable)
Follow device instructions to unlock (will wipe data)
Boot into system, allow system to connect to Internet to disable Knox Guard
Reboot into download mode, use Odin to flash TWRP
Use TWRP to flash custom ROM
So, if OEM Unlocking is not available, you can't do any of this, because that is the first step.
Unless you have factory restarted your device within the last week, no oem unlock means no custom firmware. You have the snapdragon variant, right?
V0latyle said:
Ah, ok. That makes a little more sense.
The bootloader has to be unlocked in order to flash custom firmware.
The process works like this:
Turn on OEM Unlocking in Developer Options (allows bootloader to be unlocked)
Boot device into unlock mode - starting with device off, hold both Volume buttons and plug in USB cable)
Follow device instructions to unlock (will wipe data)
Boot into system, allow system to connect to Internet to disable Knox Guard
Reboot into download mode, use Odin to flash TWRP
Use TWRP to flash custom ROM
So, if OEM Unlocking is not available, you can't do any of this, because that is the first step.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
thanks for the answer, but i was wondering is there a way in which the oem unlock option can be hidden and unhidden or some way in which you can be prevented from unlocking the bootloader, because even the wipe data/factory reset is disabled, i came across this kind of devices and i was just curious is this entailed in android development or what material can you recommend if i want to know more about this
thelite said:
thanks for the answer, but i was wondering is there a way in which the oem unlock option can be hidden and unhidden or some way in which you can be prevented from unlocking the bootloader, because even the wipe data/factory reset is disabled, i came across this kind of devices and i was just curious is this entailed in android development or what material can you recommend if i want to know more about this
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Bootloader lock doesn't prevent a factory reset. The screen you showed is recovery mode, not download mode. That's really strange, I've never seen factory reset hidden before
thelite said:
i get an error mdm mode can't download odin.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think this is the clue. You have a organization managed device with an MDM lock (Mobile Device Management). MDM is used by enterprise IT departments to manage devices and can prevent bootloader unlocking as well as factory reset.
Let me guess, you bought this device used?
V0latyle said:
Bootloader lock doesn't prevent a factory reset. The screen you showed is recovery mode, not download mode. That's really strange, I've never seen factory reset hidden before
I think this is the clue. You have a organization managed device with an MDM lock (Mobile Device Management). MDM is used by enterprise IT departments to manage devices and can prevent bootloader unlocking as well as factory reset.
Let me guess, you bought this device used?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
yes, i got this device from somebody for experiment, just to see if i can go past all this, and yes the screen i showed is a recovery mode screen, i was showing the hidden factory reset option. any help how i can go about this
thelite said:
yes, i got this device from somebody for experiment, just to see if i can go past all this, and yes the screen i showed is a recovery mode screen, i was showing the hidden factory reset option. any help how i can go about this
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I think your only option is to find out which company the phone belonged to before. If they removed it from their fleet, they can probably remove the MDM lock. This is actually pretty common - enterprise managed devices will be "retired" from fleet service and sold without being properly decommissioned - they're wiped, but the IT department doesn't remove the MDM lock.
They might or might not unlock it for you, but it doesn't hurt to ask.
V0latyle said:
I think your only option is to find out which company the phone belonged to before. If they removed it from their fleet, they can probably remove the MDM lock. This is actually pretty common - enterprise managed devices will be "retired" from fleet service and sold without being properly decommissioned - they're wiped, but the IT department doesn't remove the MDM lock.
They might or might not unlock it for you, but it doesn't hurt to ask.
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
so technically i can't find a way around it myself, i just have to request the company
There is no way I know to bypass it.
There are lots of videos online if you Google “ bypass mdm lock android “
thelite said:
so technically i can't find a way around it myself, i just have to request the company
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
MDM locks typically can't be removed by the end user. That's the whole point - to prevent employees from using devices inappropriately and removing them from enterprise management via factory reset
Kolay gelsin hocalarım telefon kendi kendine Samsung yazısında kaldı revovery kullanamıyor bende Odin ile stok rom attı kilit açmadan
Şuan telefon indir sadece tek giriyor başka hiçbir şey açılmıyor OEM kilit ve frp kapalı
Take it easy, my teachers, the phone is stuck in the Samsung text itself, cannot use revovery, I have a stock rom with Odin, without unlocking it Now the phone is downloading only one entry nothing else does not open OEM lock and frp is off