rudy-Diiriye Posted December 5, 2011 There’s a good chance that your smart phone is loaded with root-level spyware installed—not by a malicious internet source, but by your phone provider. Find out how to detect and remove it to increase performance and privacy. Background: the web has been abuzz for the last week with talk of Caller IQ, a root-level application installed on millions of smart phones including most Android smart phones, BlackBerry units, and iPhones. Not all phones are affected, and at least Verizon has denied using Caller IQ on any of their phones, but there are plenty of phones which are. The video is a demonstration by Trevor Eckhart, the Android developer that discovered the application and publicized what it was up to–watch the video to get a better feel for the reach this application has. The application has sweeping privileges and can access everything you do on your phone. Although cell providers have denied using the application for anything malicious the reality is that the app is quite capable of enabling deep level surveillance without any indication to the end user that their privacy is being compromised. We don’t know about you, but we’re not comfortable taking the word of a company that they’re not accessing our private data, text messages, and other phone contents when Caller IQ makes it trivially easy to do so–and to remain completely undetected in the process. So the best case scenario is that your provider is not actively collecting data on you, but the Caller IQ rootkit is wasting precious battery life and clock cycles; the worst case scenario is that, unbeknownst to you, it’s radically compromising your privacy in ways you never authorized. iPhone users have it easy; they can simply navigate to Settings -> General -> About -> Diagnostics and Usage and then toggle it to “Don’t Send”. Android users will need to dig much deeper: if you’re ready to check your phone and remove the Caller IQ installation (something you can’t do simply by uninstalling an app from your system menu as the carriers have made the application invisible to the end user) we highly recommend checking out Lifehacker’s thorough write up covering detection and removal at the link below. Carrier IQ: How the Widespread Rootkit Can Track Everything on Your Phone, and How to Remove It [Lifehacker] http://lifehacker.com/5863895/carrier-iq-how-the-widespread-rootkit-can-track-everything-on-your-phone-and-how-to-remove-it Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Complicated Posted December 5, 2011 Speaking on the panel, Pratap Chatterjee of the Bureau of Investigative Journalism (which works out of City University, but is an independent organisation) said that your phone could be used to record and send information about you even when it is in stand-by mode. That data included location, recordings of your conversations and even photographs. This spy software could run on iPhone, BlackBerry and Windows mobile kit. Stefania Maurizi, a journalist from Italy's weekly news magazine L'Espresso, showed documents that suggested that software products could not only read emails and text messages sent from spied-on phones, but could actually fake new ones or alter the text of messages sent. http://www.theregister.co.uk/2011/12/01/julian_assange_surveillance/ Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Bluelicious Posted January 15, 2012 I have nothing to hide they won't find anything top secret from me! Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted January 15, 2012 As if i'm hiding anything .... iyaguun baa ku daali ,,, my shukaansi, ballamo, social plans, politics, chitchats ,,,,,, ha iskaba akhristeen dee ,, Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Nin-Yaaban Posted January 19, 2012 Jacaylbaro;774728 wrote: As if i'm hiding anything .... iyaguun baa ku daali ,,, my shukaansi, ballamo, social plans, politics, chitchats ,,,,,, ha iskaba akhristeen dee ,, taas keliya ma'aha. GPS ayeey badankood leeyihiin, oo markii aad tagtid meelihii xumaa oo lo' agaa sxb, taasna weey oogaanayaan. ee marka is ilaali ninyahow, jb. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Jacaylbaro Posted January 19, 2012 Meelahaasina waa kuwee ??? ,,,,, Ma meelo smart phones owners ka laga qarinayaa ??? Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Carafaat Posted January 20, 2012 Looool@JB bacdii qurbaha waad ka bogsatay. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites