@nameuser856 No supported device running GrapheneOS is vulnerable to exploits used by forensic tools currently. There are no extraction capabilities for the Pixel 7 other than stock OS support which you can see in the original post.
The Pixel 7 has not become less secure, or "no longer as safe", the overall security of the device is still the same as when it had came out. The newer Pixels are just more secure than the older models because they have new security features, the Pixel 7 never had them in the first place. Newer generation devices are more secure by being supported upstream longer. In some cases, newer devices are better because they introduce new security features - like memory tagging for the Pixel 8 and later. Pixel 8 and 6 had large improvements over their predecessor, while certain device jumps like 6 to 7 had very little observable changes.
As of the January 2025 support matrix, the Pixel 9 is unsupported for the stock OS. This is likely due to the Pixel 9 using a different version of the Linux kernel (6.1) and Cellebrite will likely overcome that soon. Small changes in the operating system can slow down forensic companies or exploits being supported immediately, even if they arent a security enhancement. Pixel 9 has some slight security improvements over the 8 because of features available with Linux 6.1 but that's not a device exclusive and would be the same when the previous generations move to Kernel 6.1. The stock OS also isn't using said features.
There's nothing wrong with using a Pixel 7 while it is still supported, but its worth observing that the later generations are better now and in the very long-term. MTE is a huge improvement, the MTE implementation GrapheneOS is the often argued by the devs to be the most important and the biggest feature GrapheneOS ever implemented. People with sophisticated threats in their threat models should use the latest device if they can help it.