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YouTube video causes Pixel phones to instantly reboot

 1 year ago
source link: https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2023/02/youtube-video-causes-pixel-phones-to-instantly-reboot/
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HDR stands for High Dynamic Reboots —

YouTube video causes Pixel phones to instantly reboot

Google's Tensor chips seem to choke on this 4K HDR clip of Alien.

Ron Amadeo - 2/28/2023, 4:59 PM

Enlarge / "Uh, Lambert, am I clear? I wanna get the hell out of here."
Alien

Did you ever see that movie The Ring? People who watched a cursed, creepy video would all mysteriously die in seven days. Somehow Google seems to have re-created the tech version of that, where the creepy video is this clip of the 1979 movie Alien, and the thing that dies after watching it is a Google Pixel phone.

As noted by the user 'OGPixel5" on the Google Pixel subreddit, watching this specific clip on a Google Pixel 6, 6a, or Pixel 7 will cause the phone to instantly reboot. Something about the clip is disagreeable to the phone, and it hard-crashes before it can even load a frame. Some users in the thread say cell service wouldn't work after the reboot, requiring another reboot to get it back up and running.

The leading theory floating around is that something about the format of the video (it's 4K HDR) is causing the phone to crash. It wouldn't be the first time something like this happened to an Android phone. In 2020, there was a cursed wallpaper that would crash a phone when set as the background due to a color space bug. The affected phones all use Google's Exynos-derived Tensor SoC, so don't expect non-Google phones to be affected by this. Samsung Exynos phones would be the next most-likely candidates, but we haven't seen any reports of that.

This bug was first posted over the weekend and seems to be getting fixed. We can confirm our Pixel 7 Pro crashed instantly yesterday and can play the clip just fine today, so it seems like Google changed something. We haven't spotted anything obvious like an app update, but Google has lots of tricks for remotely changing how a phone works, like the ability to disable or enable code paths without pushing an update. Multiple users in the Pixel subreddit are reporting that the video works fine today, too.


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