Tuesday 13 December 2011

Android Games Used As Trojan Horse For Malicious Apps


Malware disguised as popular game apps were discovered in the Android Market yesterday by Google’s security team. Despite being removed earlier today by Google, over 10,000 downloads of the malicious apps had already been performed by unwitting Android users.
About a dozen free mobile versions of apps, such as Angry Birds and Assassin’s Creed, were published to the market yesterday morning by developer Logastrod. The author published the apps after including code to the games that would allow SMS messages to be sent to premium line numbers. Vanja Svajcer, of the blog Sophos, detailed the damage unaware downloaders can suffer after installing such apps:
Misusing premium SMS services is the most common model for malicious mobile malware. When a malicious app is installed, it starts sending or receiving messages, which makes the installation very expensive for the user. The damage is often seen only when it is too late, once a monthly bill is received.
Svajcer goes on to criticize Google for having regulations that are too relaxed and permit developers to easily sneak their malicious apps into the Android Market. The benefits of successfully publishing an app to the Market and therefore making money from it outweigh the consequences of being banned by Google from contributing any more apps to the Market. “The attacks on Android Market,” he adds, “will continue as long as the developer requirements stay too relaxed.
Google has implemented security screens that require the user’s acknowledgement that the apps were able to edit, read, and receive text and multimedia messages before the download of the app can be completed, but such a policy appears to not protect the users enough. Obviously, users are likely to breeze past such warnings and it’s not entirely surprising, either, given the wide popularity and reputation of games like Angry Birds. When everybody and their brother has probably downloaded Angry Birds at some point, who would seriously worry that the app they think they’re downloading is not an offering from a reputable developer. Other criticism directed at Google’s failure to protect its users suggest that Google should improve the way in which they educate users to protect themselves more effectively. As it stands, Google leaves its Android users in the lurch because their “caveat emptor approach means it’s up to users to make sure they don’t get swindled while shopping in the company’s official apps bazaar.
That they don’t have a stricter policy for app publishing is a disrespectful gesture towards their customers who clearly are not tech-savvy enough to be suspicious of every download. Worse than simply taking a knee on the issue, Google seems to have excused themselves with the equivalent of an Alfred P. Neuman security policy that simply shrugs, “What, me worry?”
What do you think? Should Google be doing more to keep their Android Market free of malware, or does the responsibility fall to the Android Users. Let us know below in the comments.
About Drew Bowling
Drew Bowling is a staff writer for WebProNews. He never met an all-you-can-eat buffet he didn't like. Twitter: @bentfortherent Google: +Drew Bowling 
resource:http://www.webpronews.com/android-games-used-as-trojan-horse-for-malicious-apps-2011-12

Tuesday 6 December 2011

Doll House

Dell Drops Out of Tablet Market, Pulls Streak 7


Less than a year after the debut of Dell’s Streak 7 Android tablet, the company is apparently discontinuing the device. The tablet was released in February as a replacement for the company’s Streak 5 tablet, which was discontinued in August amid rumors that its hardware would not be compatible with the latest version of Google’s Android operating system. The Streak 5 had also not been on the market for a full year.
The Streak 7, which ran on T-Mobile’s data network, debuted in February to lackluster reviews. Electronista’s review of the tablet compared it somewhat favorably to the Galaxy Tab, but ultimately found it did not stand out from the oversaturated Android tablet market. Similarly, Engadget found the device to be no great improvement over the Streak 5, and recommended would-be buyers wait until the inevitable wave of Android 3.0 tablets, which came later in the year.
The removal of the 7” Streak 7 signals Dell’s exit from the Android tablet market, at least for the time being. This limits Dell’s presence in the mobile market to its Venue line of mobile phones – one Android based, one Windows Phone based – and the Inspiron Duo, a sort of netbook/tablet hybrid device.
How long Dell will remain absent from the US tablet market is unclear, however. The company currently has a 10” Android tablet, the Streak 10 Pro, on the market in China, where it launched this year. Though there are rumors of a 2012 US release for the device, Dell has not made any statements on the subject as yet. However, the fact that each of the company’s previous two tablets were pulled from US markets after less than a year suggests that the company may not be in a hurry to dip its toe into these waters again in the near future.
About Shaylin Clark
Shaylin Clark is a staff writer for WebProNews. Twitter: @stclark81, Google Plus: +Shaylin Clark 
Resource:http://www.webpronews.com/dell-drops-out-of-tablet-market-pulls-streak-7-2011-12

Facebook-inspired Like/Dislike Stamps


Facebook may still dislike the idea of you disliking things, but let that halt the expression of your antipathy towards everything no longer. Behold, at last – a Dislike button!
Well. Sorta.
ThinkGeek now has a pair of self-inking stamps you can purchase in order to profess your Like or Dislike of anything you come across – so long as it’s in the material world. The two stamps aren’t exactly identical to the Facebook icons you click on to Like something (what, you wouldn’t wanna get sued by Facebook either, would you?) but they’re close enough that you’re guaranteed to feel drunk on the demigod-like power flowing through you as you righteously declare your delight or dismay on anything that will suffer the stamps’ ink. As a bonus, you not only get to imprint the syntax of your Like/Dislike onto something but you will simultaneously express it visually with the thumbs up or thumbs down icon that accompanies each respective stamp.
Or better yet, buy the stamps for that friend of yours that Likes the Official Dislike Button page on Facebook. Using these stamps won’t make anybody’s disapproval of something Facebook-official, but it could certainly be a salve to soothe that unrequited urge to vocalize your dislike of somebody’s status update about getting locked out of their house (or whatever ills befall your friends) on Facebook. Even better: check out the the user-submitted photos on ThinkGeek that clearly demonstrate, yes, you can even Dislike people now. Keep up with that, Facebook.
Since Obama’s been pretty hip about incorporating new technology and social media into his administration, I imagine it’s only a matter of time before the Dislike stamp supplants that cruddy old pen he uses to veto bills.
About Drew Bowling
Drew Bowling is a staff writer for WebProNews. He never met an all-you-can-eat buffet he didn't like. Twitter: @bentfortherent Google: +Drew Bowling 
Resource:http://www.webpronews.com/facebook-inspired-likedislike-stamps-2011-12