I will pretend that I’m not the only one who missed the memo about Googles
Factory Reset Protection and explain all
about it.
It all began with The Network Manager and his trusty Hudl
earlier in the week. The Hudl was not
charging, so having previous form with this kind of thing I ordered a new
charging port for it. I fitted it and bingo, it still did not work. There were more troubleshooting options, like
a new battery, a hammer… but how far to take it.
So He went off to Argos on Saturday to get hisself a new tablet. He had done some research along the lines of
What about this one it’s a nice colour or this has got 21gigawatts of flux
capacitor power or something like that, I lost interest after about number 75.
We are quite good here at Lamas HQ about passwords, we use
password managers and other methods to remind us of passwords and are really
quite reliable where passwords are concerned, so I was not overly concerned
about the loss of any saved passwords stuck in the depths of the deceased
hudl.
New Tablet arrived amid some ooh shiney new tablet interest
and then I went off to peel some spuds or re-tile the bathroom or
something.
He started with the obvious enter your google account
details, but the account password was incorrect. The current password was located and
everything continued quietly for a while.
The password was not what I would call a strong one and was duly changed
for a more complicated one as befits the level of security required. This has subsequently been identified and
ERROR No 1.
ERROR No 2 was allowing the upgrade of Android from
5.x.thing to 6.0 and 6.0.something else so closely after changing the password
When Android upgrades from one version to another it
effectively resets the device. This
means that the Google Account information needs to be input again. However, if the password has been changed
within the last 72 hours it locks the account until the password has been
changed for 72 hours rendering the device unusable until that time is up.
This account protection has been around since at least July
2015 and I have read most of a community support thread spanning some 20 or so
months, which contained many many voices saying the same thing,”what on earth
has happened and why can’t I access MY device” to paraphrase! It is to stop Tablets and phones being stolen, reset and sold on, but its a pain in the bum if you are not aware of it.
So :
- If you buy a second hand android device that has not had the previous google account removed, it will be useless.
- Try not to reset/upgrade your device and your google password in the same week.
- Make sure you keep a record of the original account details for your android device.
- If you have to perform a reset on your phone delete the google account from the device.
It appears that in the Network Managers case the Google FRP only held the account up
for 24 hours. I tried to log in the
following afternoon 20 hours post password change and it didn’t work. At 25 hours post password change it did in
fact login and continue the setup as normal.
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