Apple bans hundreds of iPhone apps that secretly gathered personal info
Apple bans hundreds of iPhone apps that secretly gathered
personal info
By David Goldman CNNMoney
(New York) October 19, 2015: 3:52 PM ET
Apple has removed hundreds of apps from the iTunes App
Store that secretly collected personal information from anyone who downloaded
them.
Most of the 256 affected apps were made in China, but
they were available worldwide on the app store and were downloaded 1 million
times, according to app analytics service SourceDNA, which first discovered the
problem.
The apps' creators used a software development kit from a
Chinese advertising company called Youmi, which allowed the developers to put
ads in their apps. That's kosher.
But Youmi's software gathered information about the
people who downloaded the apps, including their email addresses and iPhone
serial numbers -- sending all that data to Youmi's servers. That skirted
Apple's strict privacy guidelines for app developers.
And the way Youmi designed the software hid that fact
from the developers and Apple's iTunes App Store gatekeepers.
SourceDNA did not say which apps were affected. The
company told Apple about the problem on Sunday, and Apple removed the apps on
Monday.
"This is a violation of our security and privacy
guidelines," Apple said in a statement. "The apps using Youmi's SDK
will be removed from the App Store and any new apps submitted to the App Store
using this SDK will be rejected."
Anyone who already downloaded the apps will still be able
to use them but the apps won't be updated.
The data collection does not appear to be the developers'
fault, since Youmi was disguising the fact that its software was sending that
data to its servers. Apple said it is working with the app developers to update
their apps, ensuring they are safe for customers and in compliance with the app
store's guidelines. The apps are banned from the store until they are fixed.
This is the third big lapse in Apple's typically tight
app store security in the past month.
Last week, Apple banned a group of apps that were able to
peek into encrypted communications between the iPhones they were installed on
and the servers the phones communicated with.
In late September, the app store suffered a major attack,
forcing Apple to remove dozens of popular apps that had been infected by malware.
The malicious apps were capable of duping customers into giving up their iCloud
passwords and opening dangerous websites.
Comments
Post a Comment