Privacy Concerns With Android and iPhone Apps
carre4 writes "The Wall Street Journal has come out with an article where they examine 101 popular smartphone apps and show that 56 of them transmit various types of information including unique phone IDs, age, gender, postal codes, and location to ad companies. The article also includes responses from infringing app makers and talks about the pressure that some developers feel to share even more information, like Max Binshtok, creator of the DailyHoroscope for Android, who has been encouraged by ad-network executives to transmit users' locations."
Don't forget that Assisted GPS (A-GPS) requires network access: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Assisted_GPS. Some of these folks may have just been trying to get you a correct fix faster by using A-GPS. Unfortunately, you can't tell from the Android permissions screen as you will just get things like "network access" which can be used for any purpose - benign, nefarious, or anything in between. I don't know what the answer is to this, but I know I would prefer to be able to tell the app what sites / services it could access.
Le Wiki Koumbit: https://wiki.koumbit.net/AndroidFreeSoftware
The Replicant for Android list: http://trac.osuosl.org/trac/replicant/wiki/ListOfKnownFreeSoftwareApps
The Wikiperdia list: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Open_Source_Android_Applications
The article stated:
"One iPhone app, Pumpkin Maker (a pumpkin-carving game), transmits location to an ad network without asking permission."
That is flat out impossible. I am an iPhone developer; there is no way for an application to obtain user location without the user being prompted if that is OK.
It makes the rest of the conclusions very suspect to me. Just how would an app get age and gender? Again I cannot think of a way that is even possible on an iPhone without being asked; no-where on my iPhone is my birthday or age stored.
"There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley