Rendered at 22:44:04 GMT+0000 (Coordinated Universal Time) with Cloudflare Workers.
wolvoleo 14 hours ago [-]
Hmm I don't really want apps to be able to be messing around with my esims. Just give me a QR to scan. Simple enough.
nesterenkopavel 13 hours ago [-]
System uses the same mechanism under the hood. If the app has their own Mobile Operator, it can be more smooth to work with eSIM - without QR scanning at all
kuschku 14 hours ago [-]
The operator decides which apps can interact with a given esim.
Wasn't this supposed to be a general purpose computer? Why can a service decide which apps I can use to access which features of my own device?
nesterenkopavel 13 hours ago [-]
I guess Google introduced it for security reasons. You still can install eSIM within your own android or in operator’s app by just giving permissions. Unfortunately service cannot decided by its own so you are as a user staying in safety while using random app.
17 hours ago [-]
M95D 11 hours ago [-]
Does this mean that malware can redirect all my calls by installing an esim with no user interaction?
Wasn't this supposed to be a general purpose computer? Why can a service decide which apps I can use to access which features of my own device?
It's not mentioned but that permission is only available to system apps.