Yes, somewhat by design. The seed directory was cooked to be read-only so that factory-resets can bring the device back into a pristine state.
That said, we may find cases where this is irrelevant and destroying the seed is acceptable. That logic does not exist today, and we'd have to be pretty careful about it given that the seeding is not an atomic operation.
Yes, somewhat by design. The seed directory was cooked to be read-only so that factory-resets can bring the device back into a pristine state.
That said, we may find cases where this is irrelevant and destroying the seed is acceptable. That logic does not exist today, and we'd have to be pretty careful about it given that the seeding is not an atomic operation.