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]: From a security firm
by kaiwai on Fri 25th Jun 2010 06:10 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: From a security firm"
kaiwai
Member since:
2005-07-06

Google themselves are apparently going to take responsibility for "malicious applications". If Google are alerted by one end user to the existence of a malicious application, or if Google identify it themselves, they apparently can and will delete it from everybody's android phone.


No need to spam the same post over and over and over again simply to get your post count up; I read it once in reply to a previous post, there is no need to repeat it over and over again. As much as I'd love to believe in the benevolent dictatorship of Google, we have already seen it take a nasty turn in the case of Apple and the iOS platform - which is the reason why I've stuck to my good old iPod Classic and ZTE R6 Mobile phone.

Remember when Apple was the darling of geeks? there is nothing stopping Google from making the 'tough decisions' when they need to even if it means angering a few geeks along the way.

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