Tag: mobile apps

Mobile apps using Baido code are leaking personal info

Thousands of applications running on this code have been found to be collecting and sharing private data.

According to researchers at Citizen Lab in Canada, there are currently thousands of popular mobile apps that are running code created by Baidu, the internet giant from China, and the code has been causing those applications to collect the personal information of the users and transmit it to the company.

The researchers pointed out that a great deal of that personal information would be very easy to intercept.

It is estimated that the mobile apps using Baidu’s code have had hundreds of millions of downloads. The researchers have traced the issue back to problems in the software development kit (SDK) by Baido for creating Android applications. The mobile security threat applies to the Baidu browser as well as the apps that were created by the company and other firms that employ the same SDK in their app development. That said, while it was primarily Android applications that were affected, the Windows browser from Baidu was also among them.

The same researchers said that comparable types of security issues were present in the Alibaba UC Browser mobile app.

Mobile Apps The UC Browser from Alibaba and another popular mobile browser that is broadly downloaded and used in the largest internet market on the planet have also both been affected with unsecured personal data transmission.

That said, while Alibaba has already moved forward and has repaired the vulnerabilities, Baidu had yet to have completed that task at the time of the writing of this article. The company was, however, in the process of making the repairs to the holes in the kit’s encryption. Still, it admitted that it would not cease to collect data for commercial use. Some of the data collected by Baidu will also be shared with third parties. Still, the company said that it “only provides what data is lawfully requested by duly constituted law enforcement agencies.”

Among the unencrypted information collected through the Baidu code based mobile apps are the search terms that have been used by the user, his or her website visits, and his or her location. This, according to the Citizen Lab chief researcher, Jeffrey Knockel.

Mobile apps boost car rentals but don’t help sales

The auto industry is seeing a notable shift in the way consumers are interacting with companies.

According to data from AAA, there has been a considerable shift in the decision people have been making with regards to car ownership and the use of mobile apps has played an important role in this new trend.

There was a time when nearly all teens got their drivers’ licenses as fast as they could, but this has changed.

Today’s teens are used to having mobile apps available that will help them to get the most out of public transportation. They know when the next bus will arrive and can plan around the train delay because they have an application that has alerted them to this information. Moreover, most cab companies, not to mention ride share programs, have apps that allow them to have a ride drive right up to their door. This has led to a massive change in the auto industry because the urgency to buy a car simply isn’t as strong, anymore.

For those who do get their licenses, many are using mobile apps to rent cars when they need them, instead of buying.

Mobile Apps - Car RentalFor many people, the excitement of car ownership simply isn’t there, anymore. Cars are expensive, on their own, but the cost of maintaining them has been climbing, insuring them is more expensive than ever, and even parking has become cost-prohibitive in many places. The affordability of fuel isn’t enough to offset the expenses. Moreover, with streets that are continually jammed with cars, the sense of “freedom” isn’t nearly what it used to be.

AAA data shows that, two decades ago, about two out of every teens had a license by the time they turned 18. Currently, that figure has dropped to just over half of teens at that age. The trend started to change in 2010, through the popularity of smartphones and other mobile devices that could use apps to make it easy to grab a ride or rent one, while on the go, as well as to make public transit easier and more convenient to use. Instead of waiting at a bus stop and wondering when it will arrive, you can arrive at the last moment and know you’re on time.

While auto manufacturers have not been unaware of this trend, mobile apps don’t appear to have been helping them as much as they have been supporting the public transport, ride share and rental industries.