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paulgdp | 4 years ago

To be fair, when sending a Pixel for reparations, Google very clearly and explicitly asks to factory_reset the phone.

I personally didn't reset it when I sent my Pixel 3 to fix the charging port because my Pixel was fully encrypted.

All Pixels are encrypted by default as long as you have any kind of lock method enabled (PIN, password, shape...).

I don't really understand how this person got his files in cleartext and accessible.

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dotancohen|4 years ago

Another comment quotes:

  > About a month ago my wife broke her pixel phone. It couldn't be turned on so
  > we couldn't wipe it. We contact Google and used the device care to get an RMA.

Tagbert|4 years ago

In this case, the phone would not turn on prior to repair and could not be wiped.

2OEH8eoCRo0|4 years ago

How did the person conducting repair power it on and unlock it then?

Edit: I mean how did they bypass the lock screen?

willcipriano|4 years ago

That's the sort of confidence I get from the DMV, they require you to pay by check beacuse the person issuing IDs with all our personal information can't be trusted with nine dollars in cash.

KZeillmann|4 years ago

My impression from the (now deleted) text is that the phone wasn't booting or in a state where it could be factory reset, at least not without considerable effort.

rootusrootus|4 years ago

It is possible the victim made some bad choices. It does not make it fair for Google employees/contractors/whatever to violate their privacy and access their personal information, then post it online.

cuu508|4 years ago

If the phone does not turn on, I guess I could "wipe" it by opening it up and drilling through every chip I can find. Google would have harder time repairing it then but that's their problem ;-)