Daily Trust

Researcher­s develop software that knows exactly where you are

- By Zakariyya Adaramola, with agency reports

Afound. ndroid apps are spying on users far more than expected, a new study has

The research by Vocativ shows the apps that can access user’s microphone­s, call logs and contacts.

It found one of the worst offenders was a game aimed at children.

Called Happy Fish, developer HappyEleme­nts, programmed the game so that it can collect a precise location, has access to your photos and can read your text messages.

It can even tell which Wi-Fi network you’re using.

Android users have taken to messageboa­rds to complain about the problems.

The hugely popular game Fruit Ninja asks users for permission­s described as ‘crazy’ by users.

One reviewer wrote “I will never install this until it is clear as to why the developer needs access to all your private content.”

However, more than half of the 25 apps have access to contacts, and about a third tap into text messages, call log and microphone.

“These advertiser­s are trying to get more targeted informatio­n about you, so they can get more targeted ads,” PrivacyGra­de.org founder and Carnegie Mellon professor of computer science Jason Hong said.

“These apps access informatio­n about a user that can be highly sensitive, such as location, contact lists and call logs, yet it often is difficult for the average user to understand how that informatio­n is being used or who it might be shared with.”

“Most developers aren’t evil, but they often don’t know what to do with respect to privacy and security,” Hong added, explaining that some developers may simply collect data with their apps because they can, and nobody stops them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Nigeria