Submitted: March 1, 2012 - 4:45pm
Originally published: March 1, 2012
Last updated: March 3, 2012 - 4:45pm
Originally published: March 1, 2012
Last updated: March 3, 2012 - 4:45pm
Source:
New York Times
Authors:
Brian Chen Nick Bilton
It’s not just Apple. Photos are vulnerable on Android phones, too.
As Bits reported this week, developers who make applications for Apple iOS devices have access to a person’s entire photo library as long as that person allows the app to use location data. It turns out that Google, maker of the Android mobile operating system, takes it one step further. Android apps do not need permission to get a user’s photos, and as long as an app has the right to go to the Internet, it can copy those photos to a remote server without any notice, according to developers and mobile security experts. It is not clear whether any apps that are available for Android devices are actually doing this.
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