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In Android, there used to be a permission with the name BRICK that could be used to potentially disable the device. Other than hearing it as an urban myth, I do not really know if this permission can really be used to brick a device.

All I can think of are the following reasons:

  • To build a LoJack kind of an application that can remote disable a phone should it discover that the phone was stolen.
  • For enterprises to be able to remote-wipe a phone should the phone get lost somewhere.

Is there any other sane reason why a third-party app would require to use it? And why was it removed (not sure) from GingerBread?

Also, what does it really do anyways? Reset the phone to its factory settings?

4 Answers 4

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Third-party apps cannot get this permission, or various other permissions defined in the SDK, unless perhaps they are signed by the system firmware signing key.

I do not see where the BRICK permission is used anywhere in the OS at present.

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  • It seems that this permission isn't in the docs anymore, even though I remember it was there. Jun 29, 2016 at 7:48
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    @androiddeveloper: They got rid of it with the general permissions cleanup with Android 6.0. Jun 29, 2016 at 10:56
  • I see. So this permission wasn't even available for third party apps? It seems it's back in some way on Android N. Jun 29, 2016 at 14:29
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    @androiddeveloper: Like most OS-defined signature permissions, it was there for ROM developers (device manufacturers, custom ROM developers, etc.). Jun 29, 2016 at 14:31
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    @androiddeveloper: Root access does not change the signature requirements. A process run via sudo might be able to affect equivalent changes. So, for example, INPUT_EVENTS is signature IIRC. An app on a rooted device does not magically get that permission. But, through sudo, you can do low-level Linux-y stuff to fake user input, which offers much the same thing. Since I don't know what BRICK defended, I cannot say whether sudo could achieve directly equivalent effects. However, sudo could certainly brick a device, just by deleting some critical files and forcing a reboot. Jun 29, 2016 at 14:36
7

It's still there in the android documentation and there is no indication that it is deprecated. http://developer.android.com/reference/android/Manifest.permission.html#BRICK It is a system level permission and so has to be signed with the same signature as the android version build. So an app developer cannot use it. It may be usable on an emulator but I'm not sure.

As to WHY someone would want it? I can only think of the same reasons you mentioned: enterprise remote wipe or similar.

Edit: Great link discussing the matter:

http://androidcommunity.com/execute-android-brick-20110204/

According to that, it's no longer available and when it was, it was only for system builders possibly to prevent people from hacking their phones. Didn't motorola get into controversy with the Droid 2 or something over this?

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  • Yes. You are right in that it is still present. However, I have not seen any apps use it so far. Of course, maybe I haven't seen the right set of apps :) Thanks for the update.
    – Legend
    Jul 19, 2012 at 19:48
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    Is not there anymore, 2022. Aug 11, 2022 at 17:49
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If the BRICK permission were declared in an app, Android would describe it to the user as follows (source, at or near line 1626, or here):

permanently disable phone/tablet

Allows the app to disable the entire phone/tablet permanently. This is very dangerous.

While this is documented, only system apps signed by the platform key can use this permission, and I am not aware of an app within stock Android that uses this permission. As such, I do not know the actual behavior this permission controls.

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You should understand difference between a permission and actual API functionality supported by this permission. So far I do not see any API calls for bricking a device. You should understand also difference between soft bricking and hard bricking. For example damage boot portion of OS will be just soft bricking however physical burning some circuits can be considered as hard bricking. Since use of Android isn't limited to only phones and tablets, I can see some military use of this functionality, for example if you have Android based missiles launcher, using this functionality makes great sense. Another use case for example smart cards, I heard that some TV provider used smart cards which were hacked, so the TV provider just sent a "bricking" signal issued permanent damage of smart cards. I am currently interviewing by a company which deploy Android on smart cards, so certainly I will work with this functionality soon and can give you more details.

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    Yeah, a year late, but maybe you should understand that APIs change over time, and more importantly a question asked 3 YEARS before your answer might have had a different "view of the world" Sep 17, 2014 at 4:02

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