![]() ![]() Or run SE, as an example, inside of SF so you have another layer of encryption the access to which you solely control. In anticipation of that, maybe you should use SF for certain very private things. Going off on a slight tangent, there has been some discussion about LEO gaining access to SF by court order - having Samsung retrieve your Samsung account info and resetting the encrypted password. According to Samsung: "Secure Folder creates a private, encrypted space on your Samsung Galaxy smartphone by leveraging the defense-grade Samsung Knox security platform." It uses AES-256 encryption. SF is tightly integrated with the Samsung UI, so using it is very easy with My Files. You can move files in, copy them out, edit, whatever you like. Samsung Secure Folder is reportedly (1,2,3,4,5) crashing for some Samsung Galaxy users after the recent v1.8.01.5 update. You can store any kind of file in it, as well as install apps from inside it and run them, like financial and social media apps. What SF does is create a completely encrypted/secured space on your phone that replicates your existing file structure and basic apps. The Secure Folder, by default, supports a handful of Samsung apps, including Gallery, Calendar, Contacts, Camera, Email, Internet, Notes, and Maps. I don't know anything about SE, but looking at what they say in their playstore blurb, it not exactly clear if they are just encrypting files or entire folders.
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