this post was submitted on 23 Jul 2023
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To get a real answer, you'd need look at the security patches that you're missing out on. Here's a brief write-up of the July Android security patches: https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/news/security/android-july-security-updates-fix-three-actively-exploited-bugs/
So this month, you'd be missing out on some pretty severe fixes if you are running a phone with a Mali GPU (which includes many phones with chips made by Mediatek, Samsung, and Google) if your phone is not receiving timely security updates. I'm not aware of any vendors besides Google who commit to monthly security patches (please let me know if there are any), so this is a problem even on actively-supported models.
There's also a patch for a bug in a graphics library. While that was previously patched in Chrome, other apps using the system implementation would still be vulnerable.
Historically, I recall some very severe bugs that had no real defense except "pray that nobody targets me". For example, I ditched my Galaxy S7 specifically because Samsung went months and months without integrating Google's security patch for Blueborne, which made it possible for anyone in your general vicinity to potentially gain full control of your device. I was not comfortable giving up Bluetooth entirely, and not comfortable leaving my device wide open to attack.
It seems like the attack surface is limited to RF (bluetooth/wifi can be turned off if one is willing to make that compromise), app install (many just use a small selection of well-trusted apps), and messaging/browser which are regularly updated if the device is properly configured. Apps that aren't pulling in random untrusted content are far less of an attack vector (eg. one's bank app isn't connecting to everything, just to the bank, pinterest is hopefully escaping user content, etc.)
Based on helpful details at the other thread (eg. Project Mainline, baseband isolation) I’m beginning to form the opinion that it is not unreasonably foolhardy for someone to continue to use an unsupported device if they are willing to make the compromises necessary to limit their exposure. Which wouldn't necessarily mean "giving up bluetooth entirely", just not using it when you're in bluetooth range of an untrustworthy party eg. if you just use your headset to make zoom calls at home and are fine not having it on the subway.
Thanks for the reply. Definitely appreciate the point that lacklustre updates mean we need to pay attention even if we're vaguely covered by our vendor. I think you've convinced me to subscribe to CVEs for android too, I've only had alerts for my browser. Really too bad they don't make smaller Pixels.