GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum

GoFuckYourself.com - Adult Webmaster Forum (https://gfy.com/index.php)
-   Fucking Around & Business Discussion (https://gfy.com/forumdisplay.php?f=26)
-   -   "Android" users your phone may have been compromised!!!!Solution Inside (https://gfy.com/showthread.php?t=980122)

Juicy D. Links 07-29-2010 02:29 AM

"Android" users your phone may have been compromised!!!!Solution Inside
 
Iphone 4 Life!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!
:pimp:pimp:pimp


http://mobile.venturebeat.com/2010/0...d-by-millions/



Android wallpaper app that steals your data was downloaded by millions



Quote:

A questionable Android mobile wallpaper app that collects your personal data and sends it to a mysterious site in China, has been downloaded millions of times, according to data unearthed by mobile security firm Lookout.

That means that apps that seem good but are really stealing your personal information are a big risk at a time when mobile apps are exploding on smartphones, said John Hering, chief executive, and Kevin MaHaffey, chief technology officer at Lookout, in their talk at the Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas today.

?Even good apps can be modified to turn bad after a lot of people download it,? MaHaffey said. ?Users absolutely have to pay attention to what they download. And developers have to be responsible about the data that they collect and how they use it.?

The app in question came from Jackeey Wallpaper, and it was uploaded to the Android Market, where users can download it and use it to decorate their phones that run the Google Android operating system. It includes branded wallpapers from My Little Pony and Star Wars, to name just a couple.

It collects your browsing history, text messages, your phone?s SIM card number, subscriber identification, and even your voicemail password. It sends the data to a web site, www.imnet.us. That site is evidently owned by someone in Shenzhen, China. The app has been downloaded anywhere from 1.1 million to 4.6 million times. The exact number isn?t known because the Android Market doesn?t offer precise data. The search through the data showed that Jackeey Wallpaper and another developer known as iceskysl@1sters! (which could possibly be the same developer, as they use similar code) were collecting personal data. The wallpaper app asks for ?phone info,? but that isn?t necessarily a clear warning.

The Lookout executives found the questionable app as part of their App Genome Project. Lookout is a mobile security firm, and it logged data from more than 100,000 free Android and iPhone apps as part of the project to analyze how apps behave. It found that the apps access your personal data quite often. On Android, each user is asked if they give their permission to access an app, but on the iPhone, where Apple approves apps, no permission is needed.

Roughly 47 percent of Android apps access some kind of third-party code, while 23 percent of iPhone apps do. The executives also found that many apps use third-party software programs to do things such as feed ads into an app. Often, developers unquestioningly use the software development kits of those third parties in their apps, even if they don?t know what they do. In many cases, there is a good reason for the use of personal information. Ads, for instance, can be better targeted if the app knows a user?s location.

Hering said in a press conference afterward that he believes both Google and Apple are on top of policing their app stores, particularly when there are known malware problems with apps. But it?s unclear what happens when apps behave as the wallpaper apps do, where it?s not clear why they are doing what they are doing.

Solution


http://www.tgdaily.com/sites/default...e4facetime.jpg

seeandsee 07-29-2010 03:26 AM

fuck you Steve Jobs! What are you looking on porn wm board? :dddddddddd

Chosen 07-29-2010 05:13 AM

So what?

OneWhoKnows 07-29-2010 05:43 AM

Well, Android clearly shows you to which areas of the phone the app wants to get access to before installing it.

If someone installs a wallpaper app (wtf do you need a wallpaper app for anyway) that wants access to your personal info and contacts, that's simply dumb. Why would such a simple app need access to that?

Not a reason to buy a shitty phone which costs more than double of what my Samsung Galaxy S costs.

Ethersync 07-29-2010 06:23 AM

http://cache.gawkerassets.com/assets...-gap-image.jpg

Sid70 07-29-2010 08:30 AM

I am a converted Mac/Iphone user that just jumped off Android playground.

Juicy D. Links 07-29-2010 12:00 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Ethersync (Post 17371841)

:1orglaugh:1orglaugh:1orglaugh

Persius 07-29-2010 12:10 PM

kuniiiiiiiii

Jim_Gunn 07-29-2010 12:19 PM

You have to watch what you download with any OS and platform.

tiger 07-29-2010 03:31 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OneWhoKnows (Post 17371749)
Well, Android clearly shows you to which areas of the phone the app wants to get access to before installing it.

If someone installs a wallpaper app (wtf do you need a wallpaper app for anyway) that wants access to your personal info and contacts, that's simply dumb. Why would such a simple app need access to that?

Not a reason to buy a shitty phone which costs more than double of what my Samsung Galaxy S costs.

:2 cents::2 cents: FTW

CYF 07-29-2010 04:20 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by OneWhoKnows (Post 17371749)
Well, Android clearly shows you to which areas of the phone the app wants to get access to before installing it.

If someone installs a wallpaper app (wtf do you need a wallpaper app for anyway) that wants access to your personal info and contacts, that's simply dumb. Why would such a simple app need access to that?

Not a reason to buy a shitty phone which costs more than double of what my Samsung Galaxy S costs.

exactly :2 cents:


All times are GMT -7. The time now is 10:53 PM.

Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.
©2000-, AI Media Network Inc123