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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."

2 of 116 comments (clear)

  1. Isn't there anything like sourceforge for android? by splerdu · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Se we can download source and built it ourselves?

  2. Re:Laws of reality by R3d+M3rcury · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Oh, I agree, there isn't one.

    Part of the problem, though, comes from the iPhone zealots--and, to a lesser degree, Apple--who claim that Apple's App Store makes your private information nice and secure. After all, they'll claim, look at all those nasty apps on Android that transmit your personal information. iPhone users don't have to worry about that because Apple checks all of these things and makes sure that you're safe.

    So if Apple can't stop an App like Pumpkin Maker from transmitting personal information, what is the advantage to the customer of having a sole-source App Store? Isn't Apple just providing "security theatre" by implying they can do things that they obviously cannot?