Taken from 
www.rediff.com

on why consumers must be careful with their powerful mobile devices

 The news last week that Apple (and later, Google) have been capturing and
storing detailed information about the whereabouts of Smartphone users has
raised the specter of Big Brother among users and privacy advocates. A
related Wall Street Journal article on April 23 (The Really Smart Phone)
laid out the startling ways in which personal data is being collected and
used, mostly for benign purposes; but surely, it can be used for malign
purposes as well. 

Smartphones: The newest generation touch-screen devices like the iPhone from
Apple, Android-based phones, Blackberries, and WebOS devices from HP, among
others -- and tablets are computers. There is system software (like
Windows), and 'apps' (like applications on PCs) that provide useful
functions, such as weather reports, exercise monitors, maps, games, travel
reservation services, and so on.

These apps are available for download from 'app stores', eg. from Apple or
Google or Amazon. Typical users download dozens of them. Many are free, and
others charge a relatively low price, say $1-$10 or Rs. 45-450. There are
300,000 apps in the Apple App Store, and 150,000 in Google's Android Market.


The apps make the devices extremely useful, and the hardware has many
sensors, including cameras, microphones, GPS location sensors, a gyroscope,
a compass, an accelerometer, proximity sensors, etc. The phone 'knows' which
way you are oriented, how fast you are moving, and what you can see and hear
around you.

If a hacker remotely controls your machine, they can see and hear everything
that the owner is involved in. This would obviously be useful in (industrial
and other) espionage, or against wayward spouses. The privacy implications,
as well as potential loss of financial data, are troubling.

There are several concerns: one related to hackers, others related to
unpleasant side-effects of apps. On top of this comes the issue related to
platform players such as Apple and Google. Users need to treat these devices
as the powerful computers that they are, and not as dumb phones. A
traditional 'dumb' mobile phone is much less vulnerable as it does no more
than make calls and send texts. Naturally, a land-line is even less so!

While people have understood some of the implications of the power of these
devices, the fact that Apple and Google have been collecting location
information is deeply troubling. The data is a log of your location, every
few seconds, based on cell towers that have visibility to you. The data is
transmitted to Apples and Google's servers, although they claim it is
anonymous data, without a unique identifier that can identify the individual
phone.

According to reports in the Wall Street Journal, Apple stores the
information for up to a year in an unencrypted database that is easy enough
to hack into. Thus, it is possible for a malicious user -- or government --
to track you minutely. It does not appear that this file is transmitted to
Apple, but the information is there by default. Google's data is stored more
obscurely and not for so long. 

Google defended itself by saying that the data in Android phones is
collected only if the user 'opts in'. This is true; I can vouch from
personal experience on my Android phone: it did ask me if I wished to allow
the collection of anonymous data even when the app (in this case the very
useful Google Maps) was running. It is necessary for most map users to know
where they are, and indeed that is the point of the map app, and so I had to
check the option. Indeed, if you wish to use the mapping function, you
pretty much have to agree to divulge your data.

The issue is that, unlike what is claimed, it appears that the data is not
entirely anonymous: it can identify the particular phone. That is
disturbing, as there have already been cases where stalkers in the US
(including estranged husbands) used the GPS system on a woman's phone to
track her down (and in some cases hurt her). And frankly, many of us would
feel queasy if our movements were tracked minutely, and this is even if we
are not doing anything illegal or even immoral. 

The article on "The Really Smart Phone" paints a picture of mobile phone
data being used to track everything from social networks to moods, to
relationships -- a picture of individuals and groups in
heretofore-unimagined detail, which, frankly, is a little scary: imagine
what a totalitarian government can do with this!

Based on massive data mining, mobile phone data (Twitter information) has
been used to predict (with 87 percent accuracy) stockmarket movements, track
the viral spread of political ideas, suggest who might be most likely to
fall ill, what you are likely to buy, and, with 93 percent accuracy based on
your past movements, where you might be at any given time. This last is
based on an actual experiment with 100,000 European mobile users. 

There is a goldmine in mobile phone data, and Apple and Google, among
others, are looking to find it. The most obvious application is for
location-based services, as was seen in the customised ads beamed to
individuals as they walked along, in the science-fiction film Minority
Report. But it is also possible to forecast traffic congestion, people's
moods etc. (Remarkably, they found that in the UK, the unhappiest place was
Slough, surely a despondent name!)

Thus it makes total sense for Apple and Google to want to capture the data.
The question is whether you as a consumer feel queasy about being, as it
were, an open book.

A somewhat less fearsome issue is that of rogue apps. Apple validates every
app in its store -- but they too have found compromised apps. Google does
not verify Android apps themselves, and expects consumers to depend on
reviews by other users, a form of crowd-sourcing. However, now Google has
promised additional unspecified measures to vet them.

Though apps are useful -- indeed, users spend most of their time on apps --
they can carry viruses, or have side effects. For instance, your personal
information (calendar, credit card numbers, messages, call data) may be
captured. In the science-fiction horror film The Ghost in the Machine
(although not in the original Arthur Koestler nonfiction book of that name)
a crazed serial killer attacks people found through others' address books. 

In one such episode, Google found in March that 58 malicious apps were
distributed to 260,000 Android phones. They had malicious code that would
reveal, among other things, the unique identifier or IMSI or the device. The
IMSI helps prevent counterfeiting of phones, and the police use it to track
criminals.

Google said it had remotely pulled the offending apps from Android users'
devices: they were generally "corrupted versions of legitimate productsÂ…
such as Super Guitar Solo, Advanced Barcode Scanner, Bubble ShootÂ…" etc,
according to the WSJ. The fact the Google could remotely remove the apps is
helpful. If your phone was infected, Google would have sent an automatic
update to clean it up. But that is still a rather nervous-making
proposition.

Another source of concern is advertisements. Many 'free' apps are
ad-supported, which means there is a small ad area onscreen. If by chance
your fingers slip on the touchscreen, you might end up buying random things:
You may get bills for things you did not buy and may be forced to fight with
your carrier for refunds. The carrier will feign innocence, suggesting that
you have purchased these things -- often useless games or videos -- and
technically, yes, you have, although you were entrapped.

Just as in PCs, it is becoming important for smartphone users to practice
better hygiene in terms of what they load onto their systems, and also to
install anti-virus apps such as Lookout, Norton or AVG. However, that is
still no protection against private data being captured and stored. In fact,
Google has been facing privacy issues for some time already because its
StreetView mapping mechanism (inadvertently, they claim) captured private
information about Wi-Fi networks. 

Thus, in a demonstration of the power of intended consequences, the very
power of the mobile phone that is one of its most attractive features also
carries within it the potential to harm its user.

Rajeev Srinivasan



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