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[4]: Comment by anevilyak
by lemur2 on Fri 25th Jun 2010 01:07 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: Comment by anevilyak"
lemur2
Member since:
2007-02-17

Its best not to try to hide this - better to say the truth which is that the Android way is freer but less secure. Its up to the end user what model they prefer more. The Android way where you get less security (and fewer apps) but those apps are distributed in a more decentralised and and less controlled way. Or the Apple way where there are more apps and their distribution and quality control is more restrictive. Then leave the consumer to select the model they prefer. I think the consumer will prefer safety (given the general experience of consumers during the Windows dominated desktop era) but I could be wrong - the end users will decide through their purchasing decisions.


http://www.businessinsider.com/google-activates-160000-android-phon...

Whoa! Google Android Activations Leap 60% In A Month

Three reasons for all the ubiquity:

Google's Android software is a strong second to Apple's iPhone software.
Android is free for manufacturers to install, so it's on a lot of phones.
Android is being distributed by a ton of carriers, including all four major U.S. carriers, while Apple is still exclusive to AT&T in the U.S.


I'm not so sure about that "strong second" notion, particularly in markets other than the US. Like this:

http://ausdroid.net/

Edited 2010-06-25 01:11 UTC

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