Pretty sure this isn’t true. Afaik, you can exclude files from encryption on Android. This is also why you see your custom wallpaper before unlocking the phone.
Feel free to try it by yourself. Nothing easier than that. Reboot your phone and try to find it via Find My Device or ring it, without to enter your password before. It will not work.
BTW: it doesn’t make sense to exclude security and privacy related things from encryption. Otherwise there would be an unusually high risk to compromise this sort of data.
Interesting.
For me the Google Find My Phone couldn’t find the device (could only show the most recent location) and couldn’t ring it, but the Samsung Find My Phone got the location, battery level and could ring it immediately.
I’m guessing they added their implementation as an exception to the encryption, but not Google’s implementation
Good to know. I’ve been using the Google one and not Samsung because having two of the same app seemed redundant. Guess I’ll set up the Samsung one, thanks
Pretty sure this isn’t true. Afaik, you can exclude files from encryption on Android. This is also why you see your custom wallpaper before unlocking the phone.
Feel free to try it by yourself. Nothing easier than that. Reboot your phone and try to find it via Find My Device or ring it, without to enter your password before. It will not work.
BTW: it doesn’t make sense to exclude security and privacy related things from encryption. Otherwise there would be an unusually high risk to compromise this sort of data.
Interesting.
For me the Google Find My Phone couldn’t find the device (could only show the most recent location) and couldn’t ring it, but the Samsung Find My Phone got the location, battery level and could ring it immediately.
I’m guessing they added their implementation as an exception to the encryption, but not Google’s implementation
Good to know. I’ve been using the Google one and not Samsung because having two of the same app seemed redundant. Guess I’ll set up the Samsung one, thanks