• wellDuuh@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Should the notification tell you when an app uses your mic when not inside the app?

    Oh wait, it can’t if one bypasses the API.

  • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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    6 months ago

    That depends on how conclusive you need your proof to be.

    For example, you could run your phone software in an emulator and prove that your emulated microphone isn’t being accessed except when it should, because all attempts to access hardware are provided by your emulator. You would simply detect if this happens.

    You could debug the kernel on device to detect request to access the microphone hardware and correlate this data with user activities to show that it’s quite unlikely you’re being monitored.

    Perhaps you could insert physical probes into a real physical device to detect whether the application processor wakes up to service that data when you are speaking. If it doesn’t wake up, then you can reasonably argue that the data must not be getting stored or processed.

    In general, irrefutable proof will be difficult to acquire. As far as we know, most phones don’t listen to the microphone and record audio while the screen is locked. They have a coprocessor that does this but it wouldn’t have the memory to record more than a second or two and is used mainly for hotword detection.

  • AstroLightz@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Put your phone in a Faraday bag for an extended period of time, then check what kind of ads you get.

          • GamingChairModel@lemmy.world
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            6 months ago

            Yes, but an absence of a proof of the positive is itself not proof of the negative, so if we’re in the unprovable unknown, we’re still back at the point that you can’t prove a negative.

            • AndrewZabar@lemmy.world
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              6 months ago

              Well, if the conditions are such that the positive would be absolutely certain to leave evidence, then the lack of said evidence is good enough. Like, I say it’s not snowing where I live. Absolutely nobody in my town sees so much as a single snowflake. Also, it’s 72° out. Haven’t I proven to a reasonable degree that it’s not snowing where I live?

            • frightful_hobgoblin
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              6 months ago

              we’re still back at the point that you can’t prove a negative.

              We were never at the point that you can’t prove a negative. That’s dumb & wrong.

              A woman menstruating proves negative on pregnancy.

              The existence of the largest prime was disproven thousands of years ago.

    • AndrewZabar@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      That’s such a widely used concept and it’s erroneous. You can’t ALWAYS prove a negative. But if you’re able to prove a mutually exclusive positive to the negative condition, then you’ve proven it. For example, proving it is daytime where I’m standing also proves it is not nighttime where I’m standing.

      There are circumstances where a negative cannot be practically proven, or without an absurd amount of work. But all you really need to do is empirically demonstrate the negative is the likeliest reasonable scenario and that’s usually good enough, except to someone obstinately trying to stay with their position and therefore demands absolute unequivocal proof - which is a rarity entirely.

    • CrayonRosary@lemmy.world
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      6 months ago

      You can’t prove a universal negative.

      You can prove specific negatives by providing counter evidence. Thing like “I am not a woman” by proving “I am a man”.