Slashdot Mirror


Retrievable iPhone Numbers Raise Privacy Issue

TechnologyResource writes "When a couple of voicemails didn't show up recently, I thought nothing of it until a friend asked me if I'd gotten his message — people just don't call me that often. But the iPhone is indeed a phone, as some users are reportedly being reminded when they get phone calls from the publishers of a free app they've downloaded from the App Store. The application in question, mogoRoad, is a real-time traffic monitoring application. As invasive and despicable as that sounds, it raises another question: how did the company get hold of the contact information for those users? Mogo claims the details were provided by Apple, but Apple doesn't disclose that information to App Store vendors. French site Mac 4 Ever did some digging (scroll down for the English version) and determined it was possible — even easy — for an app to retrieve the phone number of a unit on which it was installed."

4 of 146 comments (clear)

  1. You Think That's Bad? by eldavojohn · · Score: 5, Funny

    That's nothing. You can use the Core Location Framework to figure out where they are. So I sold an application to celebrities only that shows them where the paparazzi are, it's called iAvoidPaparazzi. Then iAvoidPaparazzi sends my server their location which gets fed into another application called iMolestCelebs that I sell to tabloids and paparazzi. Then their information comes back to my server and gets fed out to iAvoidPaparazzi. Yeah it took me a few weeks to prime the pump so to speak but once this gets rolling I'm sure I'll make some huge bank off of it ... at least until I get shutdown after I take the heat for a few Princess Dianas. *sigh* A man can't make an honest living these days ...

    --
    My work here is dung.
  2. Re:So by tonywong · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'd mod you down for not even bothering to RTFA, but claiming that it didn't say what the calls were about is a bit disingenuous.

    From the very first link:
    Several commenters on the store say theyâ€(TM)ve received phone calls from the company behind the application after they downloaded the free version, inviting them to shell out money for the full version.

  3. Need your phone number stolen? by secretvampire · · Score: 5, Funny

    There's an app for that.

  4. Re:Where's the mainstream media? by Goaway · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This kind of investigative journalism? The kind that puts confusing and irrelevant babble about phonecalls from friends at the start of the article? I'd hope those chances are pretty low.