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I was moving some files to my Android phone's MicroSD, and suddenly the file system became read-only. I put the card into my Linux laptop and it mounted fine. I can read and write to it, no problem.

However, I can't delete or format the partition, using Gparted, mkfs, gnome-disks or anything else. It will think it's formatted the card, but it will immediately show up again with the old filesystem (exfat).

And the Android won't recognize the card, which it says is corrupted, and formatting in the phone fails. So what can I do?

3x5
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  • Double-check you can actually write & format too in nix; eject & re-insert afterwards. – Tetsujin Apr 25 '19 at 12:12
  • I'm confused by this response. I mentioned that I can write in nix, but formatting doesn't work. – 3x5 Apr 25 '19 at 13:28
  • Sorry, misread, thought you meant the droid - anyway, see [What can I do if my USB flash drive is write-protected or read-only?](https://superuser.com/questions/1125282/what-can-i-do-if-my-usb-flash-drive-is-write-protected-or-read-only) Bin the card & get a new one, in short; the firmware write protect has probably triggered, which is to all intents & purposes irreversible. – Tetsujin Apr 25 '19 at 13:29
  • OK, this is not a duplicate question. The card is **not** read-only or write-protected. I can write to it just fine, on my laptop. – 3x5 Apr 25 '19 at 17:08
  • Then if it's only related to the droid, it's off-topic on here, see https://android.stackexchange.com instead – Tetsujin Apr 25 '19 at 17:40
  • It's not only related to the droid. I said that the computer can't format the card. Read my question this time before before you mark it or comment on it. – 3x5 Apr 25 '19 at 21:06

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