Linked by David Adams on Thu 24th Jun 2010 16:22 UTC, submitted by Governa
Privacy, Security, Encryption About 20 percent of third-party apps available through the Android marketplace allow third-party access to sensitive data, and can do things like make calls and send texts without the owners' knowledge, according to a recent security report from security firm SMobile Systems. There's no indication that any of the highlighted apps is malicious, but the report does underscore the inherent risks of a more open ecosystem as opposed to Apple's oppressive yet more controlled environment, with every app being vetted before availability.
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RE[3]: Comment by anevilyak
by nt_jerkface on Thu 24th Jun 2010 21:55 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: Comment by anevilyak"
nt_jerkface
Member since:
2009-08-26


Just out of curiosity, are other people that the article's author seriously thinking that malware can't get on Apple's App Store as easily as on the Android Market ?


No it can't get on as easily, especially when Android apps can update themselves without having to go through the market.

http://blogs.forbes.com/firewall/2010/06/21/researcher-builds-mock-...

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