Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
Amazon App Store's Free App of the Day is Perceived As Probable Spyware (amazon.com)
37 points by wallflower on Nov 29, 2011 | hide | past | favorite | 15 comments


Here's another scenario: idiotic developers ask for a boatload of permissions "just in case" and don't realize how sketchy it looks.


Yea, Or they knew about the free app of the day and made a special farming one that's essentially the ad version minus displayed ads.

I find it crazy the permissions required even from paid apps. And of course amazon does not tell you them until AFTER you bought and downloaded the app.


Right from the technical details on that page (scroll about 1/3 of the way down):

"Application Permissions: (Help me understand what permissions mean) Read only access to phone state. Get information about the currently or recently running tasks: a thumbnail representation of the tasks, what activities are running in it, etc. Write to external storage. Open network sockets. Access information about networks."


From Devolver's Twitter:

> SS: Kamikaze Attack is being updated on the Amazon App Store. There was a remnant permission from testing that is unused & will be removed.

https://mobile.twitter.com/devolverdigital/status/1415672294...


Unfortunately, this is exactly what a phisher would say too, so it rightfully has no effect on the discussion.


Hmm. The Android Market page for this app has mostly positive reviews with no mention of spyware that I could see:

https://market.android.com/details?id=com.devolver.sska

Also I found mentions of this game on various Serious Sam web sites and wikis, so it appears to be a legitimate game.

Is it possible the Amazon version of the app has been modified and has had spyware added to it?

Edit: Actually, the Android Market page lists the permissions and it lists the "RETRIEVE RUNNING APPLICATIONS" permission there too. I'm guessing this is a case of "app asks for more permissions than it needs" and "Amazon reviewers flip out for no reason". Still, I don't plan on installing it on my phone.


> I'm guessing this is a case of "app asks for more permissions than it needs" and "Amazon reviewers flip out for no reason".

Wouldn't that be "Amazon reviewers flip out because app asks for more permissions than it needs"?


In the site meta description: "The single greatest video game publisher and production company ever created. Offices in Austin, TX and somewhere cool in England."

Site Title: "Super Official Website"

They sound legit. Esp. with the picture of the crackhead "helpline operator."


I didn't recognise the name either but to be fair, Devolver are mentioned as a partner on Croteam's website (the original Serious Sam developers).


Looks more like an organized effort to beat up on this app in order to bring attention to sketchy Android privacy controls in general.

I'm not defending the app author here, but I don't think all these people spontaneously decided to give the app poor reviews for requesting seemingly unneeded permissions.


Why? Because of "Get information about the currently or recently running tasks: a thumbnail representation of the tasks, what activities are running in it, etc."?


Thanks. I updated the title. I think I impulsively posted this as a commentary on app permissions in general. Android is notorious for the ominous but very granular permissions. Apple is better but they still have that gaping security hole where any app can read or write to your personal address book.

It appears GET_TASK may be used to prevent ad loading when the app is backgrounded. Mobclix.

Also, it appears if I remove the Amazon App Store app, some apps simply refuse to let you run them, asking for you to launch the Amazon App Store. I think the Amazon released apps, some of them, may be phoning the mothership. I am not yet concerned or paranoid enough to sniff the net traffic with a proxy.


Yeah, if you scroll down to the reviews, it seems like that is certainly the chief complaint.


An app review process where permissions asked for are reviewed and approved before releasing them on the App store might help fix this.

Apps that require little or no permissions could skip the review process and go straight into the market.


Apps are reviewed; apparently not in too much detail, though.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: