There are ways to bypass any of these restrictions imposed by the Android system, even if they were real. Android ships with eBPF, so you just need root.<p><a href="https://github.com/gojue/ecapture">https://github.com/gojue/ecapture</a>
Gosh I love linux/root.<p>I havent needed it on recent androids due to WFH and spending more time on my laptop, but back when I was flying more for work, I was much more into my phone.<p>Cant remember if it was my motorolla or nexus, but I felt like I had a full fledged laptop in my pocket back then.<p>Meanwhile, one of the straws that broke the camels back for Windows was the insane difficulty/impossibility of remove bloatware/malware that comes preinstalled with windows 11. In 2023, its mind boggling to think you have easier access to modify a cellphone OS than a desktop OS.
Looks good.
I hate how IOS does, especially with certificate pinning, so I cannot use my ad-block http mitmproxy to block ads in Apps.<p>EDIT: thanks for people clarifying that pinning is done by Apps and not by IOS.
Can't you still install a CA certificate through Settings like you always could?
<a href="https://stackoverflow.com/a/65319223" rel="nofollow noreferrer">https://stackoverflow.com/a/65319223</a>