Software Discovered in Some US Phones Secretly Sends Data to China
https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/b2583c7d-0219-3bf7-b914-8d3fed812de2/ss_softwar... (AP Images)By Brian Freeman | Wednesday, 16 Nov 2016 10:40 AMSecurity contractors recently discovered pre-installed software in some Android phones that secretly sends all the user's text messages to China every 72 hours, The New York Times reported.Kryptowire, the security firm that discovered the clandestine feature, said the software was written by the China's Shanghai Adups Technology Company. The software monitors where users go, whom they talk to and what they write in text messages, as well as transmitting the full contents of contact lists and other data.It is unclear if this was done as an attempt to gain information for advertising purposes or a Chinese government effort to collect intelligence. However, it was apparently carried out by design and was not a bug, and offers a frightening example of how companies can manipulate technology to compromise privacy and monitor cellphone behavior, The Times reported.It is not clear how users can determine whether their phones are vulnerable, as Adups has not published a list of affected phones.Kryptowire, which says it discovered the problem through a combination of chance and curiosity, informed the U.S. government of its findings.The Department of Homeland Security said it was recently made aware of the matter and "is working with our public and private sector partners to identify appropriate mitigation strategies."During the election campaign, President-elect Donald Trump cited cyberattacks from foreign governments such as China as one of the U.S.'s most critical national security concerns, saying the Chinese are clandestinely learning everything about America.China has long said it has the right to control and censor online content, the Daily Mail reported, noting that earlier this month, Beijing passed a controversial cybersecurity bill, tightening restrictions on online freedom of speech.The legislation also imposes new rules on online service providers, raising concerns that China is further insulating its heavily controlled internet. [end of quote] Jim Bell
Run wire shark on a laptop connected to the same wifi network your phone is, for a few days (72 hours+). Look for suspicious traffic going to China... At least until there is more info about this and some of the android AV software can reliably detect it.... -- John
On Nov 16, 2016, at 10:59 PM, jim bell <jdb10987@yahoo.com> wrote:
https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/b2583c7d-0219-3bf7-b914-8d3fed812de2/ss_softwar...
(AP Images) By Brian Freeman | Wednesday, 16 Nov 2016 10:40 AM Security contractors recently discovered pre-installed software in some Android phones that secretly sends all the user's text messages to China every 72 hours, The New York Times reported. Kryptowire, the security firm that discovered the clandestine feature, said the software was written by the China's Shanghai Adups Technology Company. The software monitors where users go, whom they talk to and what they write in text messages, as well as transmitting the full contents of contact lists and other data. It is unclear if this was done as an attempt to gain information for advertising purposes or a Chinese government effort to collect intelligence. However, it was apparently carried out by design and was not a bug, and offers a frightening example of how companies can manipulate technology to compromise privacy and monitor cellphone behavior, The Times reported. It is not clear how users can determine whether their phones are vulnerable, as Adups has not published a list of affected phones. Kryptowire, which says it discovered the problem through a combination of chance and curiosity, informed the U.S. government of its findings. The Department of Homeland Security said it was recently made aware of the matter and "is working with our public and private sector partners to identify appropriate mitigation strategies." During the election campaign, President-elect Donald Trump cited cyberattacks from foreign governments such as China as one of the U.S.'s most critical national security concerns, saying the Chinese are clandestinely learning everything about America. China has long said it has the right to control and censor online content, the Daily Mail reported, noting that earlier this month, Beijing passed a controversial cybersecurity bill, tightening restrictions on online freedom of speech. The legislation also imposes new rules on online service providers, raising concerns that China is further insulating its heavily controlled internet. [end of quote]
Jim Bell
Read about this. All the more reason to buy a rootable phone and compile install your own android directly from google source, stripping out whatever google shit you don't want from there of course. Remeber, even Microsoft ships shit partnerware and spyware and crapware with your OS. Opt out, go open source.
Cyanogenmod has been nice for a long while :) -- John
On Nov 16, 2016, at 11:10 PM, grarpamp <grarpamp@gmail.com> wrote:
Read about this. All the more reason to buy a rootable phone and compile install your own android directly from google source, stripping out whatever google shit you don't want from there of course.
Remeber, even Microsoft ships shit partnerware and spyware and crapware with your OS.
Opt out, go open source.
participants (3)
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grarpamp
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jim bell
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John Newman