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FTC Drops the Hammer On Maker of Location-Sharing Flashlight App

chicksdaddy writes "The Federal Trade Commission announced on Thursday that it settled with the maker of 'Brightest Flashlight Free,' a popular Android mobile application, over charges that the company used deceptive advertising to collect location and device information from Android owners. The FTC says the company failed to disclose wanton harvesting and sharing of customers' locations and mobile device identities with third parties. Brightest Flashlight Free, which allows Android owners to use their phone as a flashlight, is a top download from Google Play, the main Android marketplace. Statistics from the site indicate that it has been downloaded more than one million times with an overall rating of 4.8 out of 5 stars. The application, which is available for free, displays mobile advertisements on the devices it is installed on. However, the device also harvested a wide range of data from Android phones which was shared with advertisers, including what the FTC describes as 'precise geolocation along with persistent device identifiers.' As part of the settlement with the FTC, Goldenshores is ordered to change its advertisements and in-app disclosures to make explicit any collection of geolocation information, how it is or may be used, the reason for collecting location information and which third parties that data is shared with."

7 of 187 comments (clear)

  1. Some Hammer by TubeSteak · · Score: 5, Insightful

    No civil fines.
    No criminal penalties.
    No admission of guilt.

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  2. Don't be Naive by A10Mechanic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is just the tip of the dirty iceberg here. Thousands of apps do this and far worse for your privacy. Caveat Emptor

  3. Why can't they copy this from iOS? by dingleberrie · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have an iPhone 5 and a Nexus 7.
    When I download an app on the Nexus, I always feel an uneasiness as I look at all the access it wants to my contacts and other invasively unnecessary permissions. So each time I must make a decision to accept or reject using the app. I've rejected some that just seem overreaching, but I've become less strict over time... like I'm accepting to lose a battle. I assure myself, that my phone has all my real contacts, not my Nexus 7 and then begrudgingly accept the conditions. This is one reason I will not use an android phone and why I rarely download apps on android.
    http://yro.slashdot.org/story/13/12/06/1452241/ftc-drops-the-hammer-on-maker-of-location-sharing-flashlight-app#
    iOS, for those that don't know, will let me decline permissions to track my location or share my contacts on a per-app basis. Even if I enabled it before, I can go into the control center and disable it. I don't benefit from that aspect of the iOS app, but I'm fine with that. For all the control that Android is supposed to give the user, iOS shines here and I wish that is one thing that Android would copy.

  4. Re:So No One Thought It Odd by Mr_Silver · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Their flashlight app was requesting network and GPS privs? There's obviously a fundamental problem with the Android security model, and I'm just going to go ahead and point my finger at people. First off, people assume that just because it's on the Play store, it's safe to install. Obviously not the case. Second, people obviously don't review the privs their apps request and say something like "Why the fuck does a flashlight app need access to my GPS and network?" And third, lazy developers have no incentive not to request every priv in the model.

    Not to mention that although for a very basic app (like a flashlight one) it is possible to spot a nefarious permission, once you start looking a much more feature-rich app then it gets very difficult for users to work out the validity of the permission requested.

    For example, a mobile banking app wants your location. Is this because:

    1. It's sending location data to a server to track you?
    2. It's sending it to third party companies for location based advertising?
    3. It wants that information so it can tell you where the nearest ATM or bank branch is?
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  5. Re:This app never seemed necessary by safetyinnumbers · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I just hold down the lock switch for a second to turn on the LED, it's a built-in feature on my Nokia.

    But why doesn't Android sandbox apps in a way that the app is unaware of? Just present all apps with an empty contact list, a fake GPS location, an empty drive, etc and the user grants permissions to substitute the real ones as needed. That way, all apps could be installed and you'd get a popup such as "this app wants your location" in a similar way to IOS, only this way the app would keep working if you said no.

  6. Re:This app never seemed necessary by NoNonAlphaCharsHere · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Apparently you're completely unaware of Google's business model.

  7. Re: Location obviously needed by iamhassi · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Have to wonder how many other apps are doing this that have not been caught yet

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