New Nokia Smartphones Leak E-mail Passwords
Noksu writes "Despite of the recent plunge in Nokia's profits, the company is doing well in the surveillance business. The infamous 'Lex Nokia' got ratified in Finland and the company has launched a massive Nokoscope research project for data gathering. In the meantime Nokia's new smartphones forward e-mail account credentials to a remote server. Surprisingly enough, this is done in HTTP request headers. The company has been informed, but there has not been an official statement yet. Time for class action suit in the US?"
Subby here: To clarify some things: this issue is on Nokia Messaging client. The only device (AFAIK) that currently ships with Nokia Messaging is E75. The older models use the old email/messaging software, that has nothing to do with Nokia Messaging service.
I haven't checked how Nokia markets the Nokia Messaging service/client nowadays, but originally it was marketed as a service (the email proxy) and accompanying client, and you couldn't even use the client without the proxy service.
Apparently this has changed now when E75 ships without the original standalone email client.
So, E71 (or any other Nokia phone except E75) does not have this issue unless you have downloaded the separate Nokia Messaging software and use that for reading mail.
Hell, what if you use a ?, & or a # in your password? Something tells me they probably didn't do a url encode.
Although you could have some fun with dumb snoopers out there.
Just make your password:
https://ccds.serviceactivation.ext.nokia.com:443/api/v1/rest/?operation=ccds.provider.determineAccount&applicationCode=email&
address=test.user@mycompany.com&password=topsecret&
mcc=244&mnc=91&carrier=sonera
So the request would be:
https://ccds.serviceactivation.ext.nokia.com:443/api/v1/rest/?operation=ccds.provider.determineAccount&applicationCode=email&
address=test.user@mycompany.com&password=https://ccds.serviceactivation.ext.nokia.com:443/api/v1/rest/?operation=ccds.provider.determineAccount&applicationCode=email&
address=test.user@mycompany.com&password=topsecret&
mcc=244&mnc=91&carrier=sonera&
mcc=244&mnc=91&carrier=sonera
Basically their (RIM, etc) server will check for email, download it, compress it, then push it to your device.
So if you have 10 email accounts rather than your device constantly checking each one, wasting data and battery life, the server does all that work and you get push email functionality.
This is the way BIS works. The reason you get great battery life out of a Blackberry is that RIM's server is hitting your POP/IMAP server and checking for mail, then it just pushes it to your Blackberry as needed. Compared to running a Windows Mobile phone with your IMAP connection being live all day, the battery & traffic savings are enormous. The downside is that you have to share your username & password with RIM, unless you're using BES, which is what enterprises who worry about giving out their passwords do...
When in danger or in doubt, run in circles, scream and shout. --Robert A. Heinlein
This article is news, you are having comprehension issues. The article writer is not using or wanting a proxy to handle email.
The short version, since you missed it.
* Built in mail client set up wizard = spyware (And since there is no other method to create an account, how do you propose one avoid it?)
When I set up thunderbird to talk to MY imap/pop server, I don't expect it to go off and give my authentication details to Mozilla.
When I set up my phone in exactly the same way, I don't expect it to hand out my authentication info to Nokia.
Thunderbird doesn't do this. Nokia does. How is that not news? The system you are talking about is entirely different to the one the author is describing.