Google adds anti-tampering DRM to Android apps in the Play Store

It's intended to prevent malware, but it might have further implications.
 
Jon Fingas, @jonfingas
3h ago in Security

https://www.engadget.com/2018/06/24/google-adds-security-drm-to-android-apps/

Google has made a small change to Play Store apps that could prove a 
significant help to the security of your Android phone. The company is now 
adding a "small amount" of security metadata to Android APKs to be sure that 
they were distributed through the Play Store or an approved channel. This will 
make it possible to verify an app even you're offline, Google said, making it 
possible to officially add that title to your store library and receive updates 
through Goole's portal. It's digital rights management by another name, as 
Android Central observed, but that doesn't necessarily mean there's reason to 
panic -- it may ultimately be helpful, even if there are legitimate concerns.

This is primarily helpful in developing areas where people don't always have 
reliable data, and may have to go through a peer-to-peer portal or another 
channel beyond Google's own. The DRM addition should help them download apps 
with a reasonable assurance that they're getting the real thing, not a 
surreptitiously modified rogue app that could compromise their handsets. It's 
no secret that malware writers will sometimes bury malicious code in 
familiar-looking apps, and this might catch the trickery before it compromises 
a device.

Simultaneously... well, it's DRM. As with media services, there's the potential 
for companies to use DRM to determine how and when you use their apps. It might 
be difficult or impossible to tinker with an app (say, to remove ads) without 
stripping the DRM. There's also the chance that a developer could force you to 
move to a newer version of an app by altering the metadata and preventing you 
from installing earlier versions that you might prefer. As good as this may be 
for mobile app security, it's possible that developers will misuse this to 
exert more control over how you use their software.


_______________________________________________
Infowarrior mailing list
Infowarrior@attrition.org
https://attrition.org/mailman/listinfo/infowarrior

Reply via email to