one of the reasons mobile phone theft is so lucrative, because people are so obliging to keep their entire financial information downloaded to a single device
[Citation needed]
The most common reason for mobile phone theft is to wipe it and sell it, or just dismantle it for parts.
No common thief is going to be trying to break into an iPhone’s security system to get to someone’s banking data.
Attacker94@lemmy.world 8 hours ago
How do you deal with 2fa? For capital one in particular, I don’t believe there is an option not to use their app, and the other banks that I use are in the same boat or adamantly recommend to use their app.
_cryptagion@anarchist.nexus 7 hours ago
I don’t understand your question. Why would 2FA be a problem? Every password manager support supports it. I almost never use my mobile for 2FA, unless I’m away from my laptop. As for Capital One, you can log in using the website from any browser.
Furthermore, since Linux phones run Linux, there’s nothing stopping you from running Android apps on Linux phones.
Kahizzle@lemmy.world 7 hours ago
If their bank is anything like my bank, you NEED to have the mobile app installed to login with for online banking.
Attacker94@lemmy.world 5 hours ago
The standard for banks like capital one is, in order to login in a browser you must use their app 2fa, they do not support third party 2fa methods, and their app doesn’t work under compatibility layers. That last part may come with a workaround, but my earlier point is that the normal end user wouldn’t feel comfortable using such a thing if it is not officially allowed.