Linked by David Adams on Thu 24th Jun 2010 16:22 UTC, submitted by Governa
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RE[2]: Why the App Store is not a revolution
by Neolander on Fri 25th Jun 2010 09:03
in reply to "RE: Why the App Store is not a revolution"
Android apps can phone home and change themselves without user permission
http://blogs.forbes.com/firewall/2010/06/21/researcher-builds-mock-...
http://blogs.forbes.com/firewall/2010/06/21/researcher-builds-mock-...
Those are security defects, which indeed require patching, in the Android operating system, not in the market model. The previous posts were about the App Store model, not about iOS' specific implementation.
(I won't be advocating Android facing iOS, since in my opinion both operating systems are canned crap. In fact, I think that the whole touchscreen smartphone idea has only spawned canned crap in all of its current implementations, though Windows Phone 7 Series looks somewhat promising if they sell it on phones with a physical keyboard)
Thanks for posting your manuscript though.
You're welcome, sir =p
Edited 2010-06-25 09:07 UTC
RE[3]: Why the App Store is not a revolution
by nt_jerkface on Fri 25th Jun 2010 10:03
in reply to "RE[2]: Why the App Store is not a revolution"
Those are security defects, which indeed require patching, in the Android operating system,
It's a very poor design that will likely be exploited.
As much as geeks lament the locked down nature of the App store it does have a pristine security record.
There's more to improving the security of applications than your list shows, there is also developer verification which is part of the App store application process.
As for binary security checks they can be performed with software. Not 100% effective but when combined with developer verification you have a strong deterrent.
You can be dismissive of the app store but it has an excellent security record that cannot be denied.





Member since:
2009-08-26
Of course the Apple system is more secure. It's no contest.
Android apps can phone home and change themselves without user permission
http://blogs.forbes.com/firewall/2010/06/21/researcher-builds-mock-...
Thanks for posting your manuscript though.