Disable it and find out. It's easy enough. You can reenable it if it breaks something.
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I'd try that but I don't want to end up finding out that disabling it permanently disables my phone's service. My phone's service is through Tracfone and they are the developers of the app.
It won't.
Or at least it really shouldn't. I can't imagine that happening. I wouldn't hesitate to do it on my own phone.
I would try but I don't want to disable something if I don't know for sure that it's safe to disable.
Disabling something on your phone will have no impact on your account.
Without knowing the phone, and the exact package name, we have no idea what this is.
Get the Universal Android Debloat Utility, it's pretty good at letting you know what can be disabled.
I forgot to mention these in my previous comment but I've added some information about the app in my post. As for that app that you mentioned, I've never used ADB commands before and I don't want to risk bricking my phone, so I don't know if I'm going to use it.
It's not the account that I'm worried about. It's hard for me to explain what I'm actually concerned about. I guess an example would be that the SIM card becomes invalid or something. One of the phones where I disabled Mobile Services has an effectively permanent error at the top of the screen that says "invalid SIM card".
ADB commands cannot permanently remove system applications, they can only disable them till you get around to wanting to enable them again. The problem starts getting ugly when you disable a lot of stuff at once and then something breaks and you're too lazy to track down which component was necessary. A couple of applications are no problem. Of course, it's been a year since I've tried ADB so RTFM. Don't worry so much about it
That is extremely unlikely
Yes but it's still possible and I have yet to see someone mention that they were able to disable it and still use their phone service.
Yeah and a meteor could smash into your house in the next 30 minutes but I wouldn't count on that either.
The way apps work on android is, they are compartmentalized, if you disable a system app like this, the worst that will happen is some things may get wonky, if you enable it, it will start right back up again.
It's just a service, if it was something that tracphone wanted to absolutely keep you from disabling, they would have put it in the bootloader. It's most likely just a marketing app that they get kickbacks for including on their phones
Edit: Here, exactly like I said. My man you got this idea of a worst case scenario in your head with absolutely no evidence
There's at least one way to reverse it, by wiping the phone clean during a total reset, like what you would do if you sell the phone.
I would consider doing that but I'd rather not have to go through the process of re-downloading all my apps and re-customizing my phone just because I disabled a potentially important app.
I think enabling and disabling that particularly app should be enough.
What I mentioned is that it's very unlikely to brick the phone.
What are you using to uninstall it? I use Canta from F-Droid and it usually provides a short description of most apps and why you should or shouldn't uninstall them.
I actually can't uninstall it but I just using my phone's settings app and either remove or disable it depending on what that phone allows me to do. Canta seems pretty complicated to use but I'll try it and see what it tells me.
Ok I figured out that you don't actually have to setup Shizuku to use Canta. The only problem is that Canta doesn't provide a description for Mobile Services. It just provides the package name, which I searched for online, but the only thing I can find is that it's specific to Tracfone devices.
Mobile Services are pre-Installed by your carrier, that allow them to backdoor load other apps and services