• Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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    1 day ago

    Try “Shelter”. It’s available on F-droid. It’s an app that lets you manage your phone’s “Work Profile”. I use it to house scummy corpo apps that I occasionally need, but don’t want running all the time. From inside the work profile, HSBC shouldn’t be able to see apps installed outside of it.

  • ramble81@lemmy.zip
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    22 hours ago

    Let me start by saying how stupid that is…. But, if I had to come up with a reason, it may be because Bitwarden can store passkeys which can then make them portable as opposed to device specific which technically is a security bypass.

    • JaddedFauceet@lemmy.world
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      5 hours ago

      I believe they are just indiscriminately checking for the installed source (an information available from Android). If the installed source is not from Google Play Store, it will attempt to block. In this case, app is installed from f-droid.

      this is not just HSBC, a lot of Asian banks implemented this, likely as a reaction to the scam cases.

    • KuroiKaze@lemmy.world
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      19 hours ago

      Yeah I would say almost assuredly they have seen scams abusing this enough to have to implement a countermeasure

  • jet@hackertalks.com
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    22 hours ago

    Not just hsbc lots of safenet settings have a blacklist of apps they won’t run with …

    It can be avoided by installing those blacklist apps in different accounts profiles or private space

    Basically safenet let’s apps say they won’t run if anything is side loaded or instead with a third party app store

    Maybe this is their long term plan to kill other apps stores… Let banking apps be the bad guy by volunteering for a high “safety net” setting