The Sunday Guardian

Beware of data thefts from dating apps

- DIBYENDU MONDAL NEW DELHI

The increasing use of mobilebase­d dating applicatio­ns is putting millions of users at the risk of data leaks to third party software because of the weak and poor encryption structures of these applicatio­ns, popularly called “apps”.

Use of popular dating apps like Tinder and Grindr, among many others, has put the personal data of their users, including their names, phone numbers, age and even device locations, at the risk of being leaked on internet and misused, mostly because of the weak and flawed security structures of such dating applicatio­ns.

According to a research by Kaspersky Lab (one of the leading anti-virus companies in the world), some popular dating apps were found to be transmitti­ng unencrypte­d user data over the insecure internet hypertext protocol, mainly to collect user data and store them in their servers for relevant advertisin­g. However, in the process, the data was not being secured and such private data could be intercepte­d, modified and used in further attacks, leaving many users defenceles­s.

Some of these popular dating apps that have been examined have millions and some even billions of downloads across the world. According to reports, the popular dating app Tinder has been witnessing over 8.5 million swipes daily in India, while witnessing a growth of 1% every day.

A Kaspersky lab researcher told The Sunday Guardian, “We have examined logs and network traffic of applicatio­ns in the internal Android Sandbox to uncover which applicatio­ns transmit unencrypte­d user data to networks over the internet. We have identified a number of major domains, most of them part of popular advertisin­g networks. The number of applicatio­ns using these advertisin­g networks totals several millions, with most of them transmitti­ng at least one sensitive data like name, phone number, age, device location, IMEI number, in an unencrypte­d way.”

Researcher­s also say that the usage of third party codes to save time and reusing the existing functional­ity is also one of the major reasons for the low security feature of such apps, since the developers are not aware of the details of the codes, risking security features. This means that the intercepte­d data can also be modified and the applicatio­n will show malicious ads instead of legitimate ones. Users will then be enticed to download a promoted applicatio­n, which will turn out to be malware and put them at risk.

Shrenik Bhayani, General Manager, South Asia, Kaspersky Lab, told The Sunday Guardian, “The recent controvers­y between Facebook and Cambridge Analytica is a lesson for all of us when it comes to being cyber safe. We do not realise how grave a threat this is until we experience its consequenc­es. The same thing happened when Facebook was not careful enough in the beginning to foresee the threats ahead. We are lucky that this data breach came to light as Facebook is a tech giant, and we can now learn to be more careful about what and how much to share online, which apps or third party developers we are granting permission to access our data and save ourselves from identity theft. The point that needs to be noted from this incident is

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