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[5]: Comment by anevilyak
by mrhasbean on Thu 24th Jun 2010 22:32 UTC in reply to "RE[4]: Comment by anevilyak"
mrhasbean
Member since:
2006-04-03

That's certainly the case. What it does help you catch though is cases where an app is asking for rights it very obviously shouldn't need. For instance, suppose you go to install a game, and it asks for the right to make calls. Why would it possibly need that?


And the average user is supposed to understand exactly what's being asked and make the correct judgement call at install time? The same users who see a popup on their home PC telling them that they have a virus and need to install this you-beaut software to fix it, to later find they actually installed a trojan?

OK, I can see how that will work...

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