Over 1,000 Android apps are harvesting your data without permission
Researchers from UC Berkeley’s International Computer Science Institute (ICSI), which produced the research, tested 88,000 apps from the U.S. Google Play Store, and found that 1,325 apps collected information regarding geolocation data and phone identifiers.“Modern smartphone platforms implement permission-based models to protect access to sensitive data and system resources. However, apps can circumvent the permission model and gain access to protected data without user consent by using both covert and side channels,” wrote the researchers in an extensive report.
The study published on the Federal Trade Commission (FTC) website cited 153 apps, including Samsung Health, Samsung’s Browser, Shutterfly and Disney’s Hong Kong Disneyland park app that collected data without explicit permissions.
“Modern smartphone platforms implement permission-based models to protect access to sensitive data and system resources. However, apps can circumvent the permission model and gain access to protected data without user consent by using both covert and side channels,” wrote the researchers in an extensive report.
For instance, the researchers found Shutterfly – the photo-sharing website used for editing photos – to be collecting GPS data from mobile phones and sending it to its own servers, irrespective of whether users have allowed or declined the app permission to access location data.
“Like many photo services, Shutterfly uses this data to enhance the user experience with features such as categorization and personalized product suggestions, all in accordance with Shutterfly’s privacy policy as well as the Android developer agreement,” the company said in a statement responding to the study clarifying that it only collects GPS data on those that give it permission.
In the case of Hong Kong Disneyland, it was found the app used SD card as a covert channel to store phone’ IMEI information. Although 13 apps were found to be exploiting this covert channel to get the IMEI information, these apps were installed more than 17 million times.
“The number of potential users impacted by these findings is in the hundreds of millions. These deceptive practices allow developers to access users’ private data without consent, undermining user privacy and giving rise to both legal and ethical concern,” the researchers wrote.
“Data protection legislation around the world—including the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) in Europe, the California Consumer Privacy Act (CCPA) and consumer protection laws, such as the Federal Trade Commission Act—enforce transparency on the data collection, processing, and sharing practices of mobile applications.”
The researchers suggest that Google should consider these privacy issues as serious security vulnerabilities and need to upgrade the way permissions function.
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