The paper: http://research.microsoft.com/pubs/200406/ccs127-wang.pdf

Abstract:
With the progress in mobile computing, web services are increasingly 
delivered to their users through mobile apps, instead of web browsers. 
However, unlike the browser, which enforces origin-based security policies 
to mediate the interactions between the web content from different 
sources,  today’s mobile OSes do not have a comparable security mechanism 
to control the cross-origin communications between apps, as well as those 
between an app and the web. As a result, a mobile user’s sensitive web 
resources could be exposed to the harms from a malicious origin.

In this paper, we report the first systematic study on this mobile 
cross-origin risk. Our study inspects the main cross-origin channels on 
Android and iOS, including intent, scheme and web-accessing utility 
classes, and further analyzes the ways popular web services (e.g., 
Facebook, Dropbox, etc.) and their apps utilize those channels to serve 
other apps. The research shows that lack of origin-based protection opens 
the door to a wide spectrum of cross-origin attacks. These attacks are 
unique to mobile platforms, and their consequences are serious: for 
example, using carefully designed techniques for mobile cross-site 
scripting and request forgery, an unauthorized party can obtain a mobile 
user’s Facebook/Dropbox authentication credentials and record her text 
input. We report our findings to related software vendors, who all 
acknowledged their importance. To address this threat, we designed an 
origin-based protection mechanism, called Morbs, for mobile OSes. Morbs 
labels every message with its origin information, lets developers easily 
specify security policies, and enforce the policies on the mobile channels 
based on origins. Our evaluation demonstrates the effectiveness of our new 
technique in defeating unauthorized origin crossing, its efficiency and the 
convenience for the developers to use such protection.

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