Samsung DIVE Issue - Galaxy S II General

I've recently exchanged my phone because of a fault and I now have 2 phones listed on Samsung Dive (old and new)
They are both listed with the same phone number, but only 1 works (which is to be expected)
I just wanted to know whether it's possible to have an my previous GS2 removed from Samsung Dive and if it is, does anyone know how I can do it?

Good question.
I need to know this, too.

The phone you wish to remove only disappears when it is associated with another Samsung Account. If you have it, reset and create a new Samsung account under accounts and sync.
If you don't have the phone then hope a new owner does this otherwise you won't be able to remove it.
I've had a running battle with Samsung over the last 2 weeks and unbelievably the tech support DON'T know what branch of Samsung manage the samsungdive site, so they're unable to remove any rogue registrations on it.

Related

[Q] unauthorised software found by technician

hi,
i have a 3 month old samsung galaxy note 3, 4 weeks ago received this msg Error: An application has been forced to stop for an unauthorized attempt to access system in your device then a week after it started rebooting by itself, i brought it back to my service provider and they sent it away for repair, then the technician found unauthorised software on my phone, they said now its "custom" not "official", it voided my warranty and have to pay for the costs of repair, i have rang samsung as well regarding my concers, but they too doesnt seem to be so much help they said maybe an app caused this "unauthorised software" they said it rooted to my software. the funny thing is i did not root my phone or tamper it in any way?
anyone who has experienced the same thing? any thoughts? d you know any apps that can cause this problem?
cheers
I know a few years ago devs stopped using Rage because malicious hackers were putting it into apps to root phones and steal data without the phone's owner knowing. See if a factory reset works.
Sent from Spaceball One.
Have you tried Avast or Lookout to remove any malware or viruses?
Sent from my rooted Note 3 (N900T) using XDA Premium
As far as rebooting goes, did you wipe cache and perform factory reset? Because it does seem like a software problem and those should fix it.
Now for the the root itself: assuming you got your phone brand new (not some refurb or used) and not rooted it on purpose, it would be nice to find which program did it, so you could avoid it in the future. Again assuming you did not give your phone to your friends to play with it for example, I would make a list of all the programs downloaded, especially from unofficial sources (outside of Google Play) and basically look around for most likely source of your problems. The reason you should go with all this trouble is:
1. Even if fixed now, there is pretty good chance you could download this program again and it could be serious, harmful virus.
2. You could try fighting with Samsung, arguing that such and such particular program caused flag to be tripped, without your knowledge or consent and that would be Samsung fault not to properly protect the phone.
There is a big difference between somebody going to all the trouble of rooting on purpose and some virus messing your phone up.
And again all this assumes you didn't forgot to mention some important detail.
tine1224 said:
hi,
i have a 3 month old samsung galaxy note 3, 4 weeks ago received this msg Error: An application has been forced to stop for an unauthorized attempt to access system in your device then a week after it started rebooting by itself, i brought it back to my service provider and they sent it away for repair, then the technician found unauthorised software on my phone, they said now its "custom" not "official", it voided my warranty and have to pay for the costs of repair, i have rang samsung as well regarding my concers, but they too doesnt seem to be so much help they said maybe an app caused this "unauthorised software" they said it rooted to my software. the funny thing is i did not root my phone or tamper it in any way?
anyone who has experienced the same thing? any thoughts? d you know any apps that can cause this problem?
cheers
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
I actually experienced this a few days ago. I got another Note 3 on the first of this month, that was actually a first batch device and running the software that the Note 3's shipped on. It stopped working a few days later.. long story.
Anyway the replacement Note 3 I got was running a slightly newer, though not most up to date software. On the first Note 3 I went from version 1 shipping software to the latest update and there were no issues. With the second Note 3 I went from the updated software to the most up to date, and somewhere along the lines of me updating I got the error message that you are getting.
It is my belief that the update Samsung released causes this in some circumstances. An easy fix is just to do a factory data reset, worked for me and it hasn't popped up since. Samsung are completely wrong for accusing you of rooting though, I can replicate this and I have not rooted whatsoever.
hi there guys, thanks for all your reply
I definitely did not root my phone or tamper with it, I have not downloaded any other apps that are outside of google play and i have not downloaded any apps other than the common ones, (FB SKYPE ETC).
Also my phone is brand spanking new when I bought it, When it broke down I tried factory reset but nothing happened just keep on restarting..same problem
anyway, Just an update on my phone, I got it back from repair, however within minutes of getting it back, it started the same problem again,, BOOT LOOP, I havent even had a chance to download any apps, so I went back to the service provider and I told them what happened and I demanded for a new phone and a refund, the customer support guy then told me they have to escalate it first but he will note it on the ticket that i want a new phone and refund, I cant blame the guy though he is just following their protocol
Its been five days i havent heard anything from them yet, I will keep you guys updated on what happened

Sign into google account after reset

Hello. A have bought a phone from Ebay, and cant sign in to google account due to security reasons (thanks google)
Contacted the seller, to provide me his acc/pass, but its useless. I am getting the same error. Can some1 help me solve this problem please?
Sounds like you purchased a stolen device.
This is FRP, Factory Reset Protection, and it's new on Lollipop/Marshmallow (can't remember exactly)... If a device associated with a Google account is factory reset, you MUST have the Google account credentials that were on the device prior to the reset to use the device again, a simple yet effective theft deterrent but can be a problem for consumers uneducated to it in the secondary market.
It is a very similar to approach to how Apple has done it for years and Windows Mobile has adopted a similar concept with Windows 10 Mobile.
On a few devices there are work arounds, but I am not aware of a working one on the Moto X.
BTW, if the seller changed his password or security method (like turned off 2-step authentication) recently, the phone is locked out even with the correct credentials for 24-72 hours depending on security patch applied to the device.
Oh, and a super simple way to avoid this... Delete all Google accounts on the device prior to a factory reset and wait a couple minutes (ensure you have an active Internet connection) then perform the reset.
i supose thats is becose the seller turned on the 2 step autentification.
idk, should i wait those 72 hours? or mby contact motorolla support?
TrunksMD said:
i supose thats is becose the seller turned on the 2 step autentification.
idk, should i wait those 72 hours? or mby contact motorolla support?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Up to you, but Moto/Lenovo won't help at all since you are not the original owner with a matching serial number receipt. No one will or can help you except the person who know the Google account and password that was on the device when it was reset.
The whole point of FRP is it isn't capable of being bypassed, even by the manufacturer, otherwise what's the point of it? If you could definitively prove ownership to Moto they might help, but you can't since you were not the original purchaser of the device and you really don't know what happened to it before you got it.
Unfortunately, unless the seller can be of assistance or is willing to take it back, you're pretty much out of luck. You could file a PayPal claim against the seller if they won't take it back and the device was not as it was presented in the listing though.
the seller provided his acc/pass for the device, i have even the original purchase receipt (amazon.it)
btw. i have contacted motorola support, and they said to wait 72 hours, then to try to log in again
TrunksMD said:
the seller provided his acc/pass for the device, i have even the original purchase receipt (amazon.it)
btw. i have contacted motorola support, and they said to wait 72 hours, then to try to log in again
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Then things are different in your country than mine... Moto won't even talk to someone in FRP who isn't the original owner. Good luck, hope it works out.
Just because the device has prior credentials on it, doesn't mean it's stolen. In fact I would the majority of the time it isn't, but all the "experts" on these forums offer that as their only advice, because really they don't have any idea how to bypass. Thanks "experts"
https://forum.xda-developers.com/showpost.php?p=64604318&postcount=2519
And as always, sign out of you google account before any reflashing of any kind of new or resetting default factory resetting the OS. Recovering the OS through TWRP does not require sign out of the google account.

Samsung Galaxy S8 Security - How failproof is it?

Hi, I was with my friends earlier and this guy kept saying how his S8 is much safer than all other droid phones due to the Samsung account thing. This got me thinking...
So by now we all know Google Lock aka FRP is easy to bypass. And I dare say Samsung lock can be bypassed the same way, although I got no knowledge in this.
Imagine he loses his device abroad and he gets both Samsung and Google locks wiped along with a recovery factory reset. Is there a way to track the phone via IMEI? Even in another country? Can he still use his samsung account to track it?
ull disclosure: I placed a few beers as a bet that I could make his phone clean within minutes if I had a USB cable and a laptop with internet connection, he agreed. Make me drunk boys.

Lenovo TAB E10

I just purchased a used Lenovo Tab E10 from a pawn shop that they had factory reset.
It powers up ok but as I put in my google account info it needs the previous account info that was used before it was reset.
No matter what I do it continues to ask for previous google info to sync from google and won't let me proceed any further.
Is there a way to bypass this and register it as my own or do I need to return it and get my money back?
Thanks GB
It's a security feature in newer Android releases. To do it right you need to log out the existing user before resetting, but either they didn't know that or more likely didn't have the previous owner's credentials. Maybe Lenovo can help if you have proof of purchase, or else a complete reflash might work, but I'm not sure there.
Tab e10 frp
You ever find a solution? I came across the same problem with it after I bought it from a lady, got it cheap cause of that too. Anyways, I found a way if you don't mind spending a few to go through the steps. I don't want to help if it's stolen though...

Device locked by former owner's Google account?

Hi there,
It's been a longtime I didn't post out there.
A couple of weeks ago, I drowned my Galaxy M31 (bummer!), couldn't revive it. Being broke, back to my good old dumb-phone I use while skating (it's OK, actually).
A nice colleague of mine proposed to lend me her old Galaxy S7 she replaced a while ago by a newer device, telling the battery is a bit lazy now... Thanks to her.
In front of her, I reboot in recovery (she didn't even knew there was such a thing), factory reset the device and off we go.
Back home, I flash the last available Oreo firmware (just to be sure, with the CSC part), let it boot and... yeah, Google detects the device was reset and ask for the previous owner's account, as far as I understand.
It's OK, it is to trick robbers stealing phones and trying to flash them anew, I suppose. Got two phones robbed, encrypted and all, I hope they were f*** with mine.
I feel like... a sucker, I should have been more cleaver and probably ask her to delete the Google account it was registered to (hers, her husbands)
Can someone please tell me if it is the right way to do it right?
Never had to do anything like that: so next Monday, she sign in with her email or phone number, her Google password, the device goes on booting/configuring skipping whatever time consuming setup, up until she's able to "cancel" or delete the Google account?
Thanks in advance.
Hi there,
It took some time, lack of actually, to get it unlocked by my friend. The device is back to me and running Oreo on my account.
Let's root it and probably upgrade it to Lineage 17 or 18 as I did with an good ol' A300FU.

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