https://www.yahoo.com/news/m/b2583c7d-0219-3bf7-b914-8d3fed812de2/ss_software-discovered-in-some.html


(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.
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Jim Bell

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