Thursday, December 10, 2015

51 out of 55 mobile applications is a potential threat to the user's personal data


Protection of personal data has long ceased to be a whim. According to statistics, in the US every fourteenth American in 2012-2013 suffered from so-called "identity theft" - the use of other people's personal data in their own interests. In Russia, this problem also does not cease to grow. According to InfoWatch, in the period from 2013 to 2014 the number of leaks in Russia grew by 73%, and about 3/4 of them are also used for identity theft. And, unfortunately, our mobile devices, as a rule, possess considerable knowledge about our personalities, too, do not mind to someone about this "chat".


According to Ars Technica, a team of researchers examined the 55 most popular apps for Android and iOS, and found that they often have a tendency to send personal user data to third parties. Generally such data are e-mail-addresses, names and physical location. It is enough to set many types of fraud.

If we compare the statistics on operating systems, the picture is as follows: on iOS about 47% of the tested applications issued by geolocation, 18% reported his name and 16% reported a custom e-mail; 73% for Android applications reported by e-mail, 49% - the name, about 24% - technical parameters of the device, including the IMEI. On average, Android-3.1 application sends data to an outside domain, and iOS - 2,6.

In addition, the researchers found that 51 of the 55 applications on Android are associated with a certain domain safemovedm.com, the purpose of which remains unclear. At Google, this fact has also not commented.

All this is particularly important, given the development of mobile payment systems. And the service is so much we do not impose, as he is really comfortable. And the only deterrent is precisely the issue of security. In addition, with the development of wearable electronics gadgets are becoming more aware about the physical condition of the user. I think that many of the data will also want to keep to yourself.

Sami researchers also advise on the possible responding application with false information. While this is the only opportunity for the user to protect their personal information. However, given the nature of the data collected, the council barely pulls helpful.

Tuesday, December 8, 2015

Soon Chrome for android will save up to 70% of the data for oppening webpage when the connection is slow

chrome-for-android

Google has announced forthcoming changes to Chrome that should help folks on limited internet connections save data. The change will allow you to disable automatic image loading, a very sensible approach as images often take up the majority of loading time on web pages.


The implementation is very clean in that it allows you to easily load a specific image on a page by tapping its placeholder, which is good for those articles or pages where seeing the image is imperative. Otherwise, these changes are said to bring a 70% improvement in data consumption, which is no small amount for a mobile device.


Google is aiming this feature at emerging markets, so it’ll only be available in India and Indonesia in its trial phase. There are plans to bring it to more regions, though, so sit tight and we should all have this sweet option available to us in due time.