More Than 4,000 Android Apps Silently Access Your Installed Software
Arthur T Knackerbracket has found the following story:
More than 4,000 Google Play apps silently collect a list of all other installed apps in a data grab that allows developers and advertisers to build detailed profiles of users, a recently published research paper found.
The apps use an Android-provided programming interface that scans a phone for details about all other apps installed on the phone. The app details-which include names, dates they were first installed and most recently updated, and more than three-dozen other categories-are uploaded to remote servers without permission and no notification.
Android's installed application methods, or IAMs, are application programming interfaces that allow apps to silently interact with other programs on a device. They use two methods to retrieve various kinds of information related to installed apps, neither of which is classified by Google as a sensitive API. The lack of such a designation allows the methods to be used in a way that's invisible to users.
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