I have a Nexus 6P that I found when cleaning, but it's FRP locked and I have no way to get into the account. Is there a way to get around it and somehow wipe the device and flash a new version onto it
Give the phone back to the owner, the person will know what to do with it.
Just use YouTube, there usually is an exploit to get past FRP, all phones I ever had could be unlocked by a flaw in the system - good luck but this topic is actually not welcome, as we have no way to check if you are the legit owner...
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I sold a nexus 6p online. I shipped it out to the buyer. He received it and he is unable to sign into his account on the phone. It is telling him that it's still attached to my account. I was wondering if there was a way to remotely delete my account so the buyer and sign into it with his account.
mflammger said:
I sold a nexus 6p online. I shipped it out to the buyer. He received it and he is unable to sign into his account on the phone. It is telling him that it's still attached to my account. I was wondering if there was a way to remotely delete my account so the buyer and sign into it with his account.
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Search google for FRP (factory reset protection).
As far as I know there is no way to do it remotely. I think you should have signed out of your google account before you reset the phone. Most likely he will have to ship it back to you so you can sign in and then remove your account.
Here: https://security.google.com/settings/security/activity?pli=1
But I'm not sure how that will affect the device.
You could always change your password to something stupid for a few seconds for him to sign in and sign out depends how sensitive data you have on your account..
Will Android device manager do it? Will it remotely wipe the phone and remove my account from it, or will it flag the phone as stolen. I cannot get any solid information from repeated Google searches as to what happens after the device is remote wiped.
Android Manager will wipe the device but when it turns on it will ask for any Google account it was bound to before wipe. The other person needs to enter your Gmail account, then his, then you can either change password to your account or wipe it with Device Manager and next time it boots it will accept your account or his (because both were added before wipe).
You can always set a temporary password to your Google account, send it to the buyer and have him log in with his account. After that, you change your password back and voilĂ .
Is all of this a working protection against simply Fastboot unlocking bootloader, flashing stock image then rebooting into a working phone?
Mangala_Dharma said:
Is all of this a working protection against simply Fastboot unlocking bootloader, flashing stock image then rebooting into a working phone?
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If the bootloader is currently locked, I believe you would have to go into developer options to enable the OEM unlocking setting... Which you can't get to because of the FRP.
Mangala_Dharma said:
Is all of this a working protection against simply Fastboot unlocking bootloader, flashing stock image then rebooting into a working phone?
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Unlocking bootloader (OEM unlocking in dev options) deactivates this protection but to do it you still need to get in there somehow and you can't without first logging into a Google account it is currently bound to. And as you probably know without unlocked bootloader you can't flash anything.
And even if he could flash new ROM my friend had bought used Samsung S7 Edge and previous owner also left it locked. You can flash different ROMs with S7 Edge out of the box but the FRP survived several attempts at flashing stock/custom ROMs. We had to use the workaround found here at xda S7 forums.
Thanks for all the info.
I did not unlock the bootloader on the phone. I read a little bit about Factory Reset Protection and the only way around it was to sign in to the phone and then remove your account from the phone. It's something that was new this year for Android devices and I was just unaware of it.
It's actually been around awhile, just not widely implemented. If you remember which monthly security update you last installed, he might be able to get around it. YouTuber root ninja has some videos depending on patch. The one I watched just for kicks (since I'd like my 6P to be protected if lost) was a few months old though.
Sent from my Nexus 6P using Tapatalk
I heard that with a simple factory reset with the stock recovery should remove the account from the phone.
Lol good luck with getting that off remotely it's impossible it's kinda like apple cloud system which is really good.
As the title implies. Is this possible? if so, how?
I'm talking about the one that says "your device can't be checked for corruption" .... etc
No
It's not the end of the world, but I'm hoping that someone will find a workaround for this.
Seeming that it's allowed and doesn't break manufacturers warranty, it seems rather odd to consistently display this at boot after the first time.
It's because you bootloader is unlocked, therefore it doesn't pass certain security checks. It's like that with the Nexus 6p and I'm sure it's like that with the pixel. That will never change I don't believe.
Also becareful not to ever lock your bootloader while you have a custom recovery installed or you will brick your device.
Eric214 said:
It's because you bootloader is unlocked, therefore it doesn't pass certain security checks. It's like that with the Nexus 6p and I'm sure it's like that with the pixel. That will never change I don't believe.
Also becareful not to ever lock your bootloader while you have a custom recovery installed or you will brick your device.
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My Nexus 4 and 6 didnt have that warming but my Moto E 2015 does. I think its based on the phone. All UNLOCKED Bootloader.
Warning Sucks!
It's a security requirement set by Google (to show a warning message like that) as part of the agreement for OEMs to use Android on their devices. It will not be going away anytime soon.
The Axon 7 has a patch to get rid of this warning...
I have this device with FRP lock ON and Bootloader locked. I used a temporary google account on it, for my son, and he lost his password without a way to restore it. I am looking how to flash the device in such a way so that when I boot it, it didn't ask me for my old account password to be entered. Any way to unlock the Bootloader via FASTBOOT? or any other way of getting into phone menu? My son is a kid and he wouldn't need a fancy phone for now, just this old guy will fit him in the next year or two.
I was wondering if anybody could help me out! My brother bought an LG G6 from somebody. The phone is legit but had a pattern lock. I was stupid and suggested going into recovery and data resetting it. Completely forgetting about FRP lock. now we can't get ahold of the guy that we bought it from. Is there any way to reflash the firmware or by any other means to get past this FRP lock because I really feel like it's my fault for resetting the phone
Hey did you get it back up and running? If not PM me.
The rather complicated video at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BkEDk4xzl4I does work to remove FRP.
Okay, so i'm out of the XDA world for a couple years, technology probably changed a lot, so no blaming for being noob etc.
So, i lost my phone on 25.12.2020, FindMyDevice and FindMyMobile are completely useless, all their functions are unusable for some reason.
I started panicking really, so i checked on some videos online if people can bypass the password and use the phone somehow. Surprise, it is easy AS FVCK! All they did was go in recovery and just factory reset it. On top, 3rd day i changed my Google password (which i will never regret in my life), so probably the phone is out of my Google account as well.
So my last hope is that i remember i was trying to root my phone and i couldn't. It was from Verizon. Unrootable. It was some bootloader v4 or some ****. Not really sure.
TLDR, Unrootable S10+ with unlockable bootloader, is it able to factory reset? Wipe it out and bypass the password?
It is always possible to boot to recovery mode and erase the device there. However, deleting the entire storage does not mean that the device is usable after that. When a device is not 'officially' wiped; it is mandatory to log in with the last google account that was on the device. It does not matter that you have changed your Google password. This securityfeature is called frp lock. Unfortunately, frp can also be circumvented when a device is rooted. But in order to be able to root, the bootloader must be unlocked and that is only possible if the device is unlocked. Your device cannot be used by others. But as you mentioned before, FindMyDevice did not work on your device so this lock is of no use to you. The only thing you can do is register the imei number as stolen and then wait for the device to be sold and checked.
Report IMEI as Lost / Stolen - IMEI.info BLACKLIST - News - IMEI.info
Sorry for my bad English.
Mate thanks a lot for your answer, you really helped a lot! Im glad those busters wont be able to use my phone now!