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IOS

Unauthorized iOS Apps Leak Private Data Less Than Approved Ones 179

Sparrowvsrevolution writes "In the wake of news that the iPhone app Path uploads users' entire contact lists without permission, Forbes dug up a study from a group of researchers at the University of California at Santa Barbara and the International Security Systems Lab that aimed to analyze how and where iPhone apps transmit users' private data. Not only did the researchers find that one in five of the free apps in Apple's app store upload private data back to the apps' creators that could potentially identify users and allow profiles to be built of their activities; they also discovered that programs in Cydia, the most popular platform for unauthorized apps that run only on 'jailbroken' iPhones, tend to leak private data far less frequently than Apple's approved apps. The researchers ran their analysis on 1,407 free apps (PDF) on the two platforms. Of those tested apps, 21 percent of official App Store apps uploaded the user's Unique Device Identifier, for instance, compared with only four percent of unauthorized apps."

Comment big deal (Score 4, Interesting) 25

I've worked for Bloomberg, and I can tell you they're not doing it for the philanthropy. They're most certainly in it for the money. So they give you the API to build plug-ins or more create a tight Bloomberg feed to your own product. Big deal. I didn't see anything about giving the data away.

Comment Re:I like it (Score 1) 364

I like the new element inspector as well. The mode where you hover over elements to hunt them down is extremely crisp. Extra points for the way they hi-light and bubble tag the element, really sharp look and feel with that one. One more really smart move is to peg the CSS to the right and the html to the bottom. Just a fantastic upgrade for Firefox.

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