So, there's a rootkit hidden in millions of cellphones

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    So, there's a rootkit hidden in millions of cellphones


    Posted: 02 Dec 2011
    The rootkit belongs to a company called Carrier IQ and it seems that it has low-level access to the system that allows it to spy on pretty much everything that you do with your handset. This, on the face of it, seems like an extremely serious breach of security, privacy and trust.
    According to Carrier IQ the company is ‘not recording keystrokes or providing tracking tools.’ The video above seems to suggest otherwise.

    When Eckhart initially labeled the software as a rootkit, Carrier IQ threatened him with legal action. Only when the Electronic Frontier Foundation stepped in did the company back off from this threat.
    “Every button you press in the dialer before you call,” Eckhart says on the video, “it already gets sent off to the IQ application.”
    The furore has angered many consumers, after it was found that the software, deeply embedded within the software of the world’s most popular mobile phone operating systems, was collecting information not limited to:

    • when they turn their phones on;
    • when they turn their phones off;
    • the phone numbers they dial;
    • the contents of text messages they receive;
    • the URLs of the websites they visit; the contents of their online search queries — even when those searches are encrypted;
    • and the location of the customer using the smartphone — even when the customer has expressly denied permission for an app that is currently running to access his or her location.
    [UPDATE: According to a statement from Apple, the company stopped supporting Carrier IQ with iOS 5.0 on most of its devices, but the iPhone 4 still uses it.]

    iPhone owners
    : Here’s how to disable the collection of diagnostic information on your handset.

    So, it seems that there is a rootkit hidden in millions of Android, Symbian, BlackBerry, webOS and even iOS handset that logs everything we do.
    Read More:

    So, there's a rootkit hidden in millions of cellphones | ZDNet

    Finding and cleaning out your smartphone’s Carrier IQ poison

    Isn’t it wonderful? It turns out that a spyware rootkit from a company called Carrier IQ is on hundreds of millions of Android and iOS smartphones and tablets. Only Windows Phone-powered smartphones seems to have avoiding this program that reports on almost everything you do with your phone.

    In the case of iPhones, it appears that Apple bakes this snooper into every phone. With other smartphones, the carriers, such as AT&T and Sprint, add it into your phones’ firmware before it gets into your hands.

    Carrier IQ and the carriers aren’t talking much about their snooping ways.
    Finding and cleaning out your smartphone’s Carrier IQ poison | ZDNet

    You might have noticed that I didn’t list Windows Phone 7 OS earlier. That’s because it seems that Windows Phone handsets don’t have Carrier IQ installed.
    Senator demands answers over Carrier IQ mobile phone tracking | ZDNet
    Borg 386's Avatar Posted By: Borg 386
    02 Dec 2011



  1. Posts : 117
    Windows 7 Home Premium 64bit SP1
       #1

    Big Brother is everywhere...let the law suits begin!
      My Computer


  2. Posts : 6,618
    W7x64 Pro, SuSe 12.1/** W7 x64 Pro, XP MCE
       #2

    Glad that I don't use a cell phone. It would seem that the FCC would have a system in place to find problems such as this, before it being offered to the public, rather than after the fact.
      My Computer


  3. Posts : 145
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64 SP1
       #3

    Every time you are transferring information through other means than whisper near a waterfall, be sure that someone else is listening. Finding this "security breach" is just another hoax to make people think they are more secure now since the bad guys have been disclosed. I gave up being paranoid about privacy years ago. You pretty much can't fight it.
      My Computer


  4. Posts : 6,618
    W7x64 Pro, SuSe 12.1/** W7 x64 Pro, XP MCE
       #4

    Paranoia is based on the concept of an imaginary fear...this is not imaginary. If one wishes to concede their privacy, that is their privilege, but all that accomplishes is to make it easier for it to be taken away.
      My Computer


  5. Posts : 435
    Windows 7 Ultimate x64
       #5

    I already turned this and Location Services off :)
      My Computer


  6. Posts : 7,781
    Win 7 32 Home Premium, Win 7 64 Pro, Win 8.1, Win 10
    Thread Starter
       #6

    galaxys said:
    Big Brother is everywhere...let the law suits begin!
    Didn't take long...

    Carrier IQ tries to spin its way out of trouble

    http://www.zdnet.com/blog/networking...f-trouble/1710

    Carrier IQ, the mobile phone network analysis company at the heart of the smartphone spyware scandal, isn’t talking to me, but it is talking to AllThingsD. To them, Andrew Coward, Carrier IQ’s VP of marketing, explained that “The software receives a huge amount of information from the operating system. But just because it receives it doesn’t mean that it’s being used to gather intelligence about the user or passed along to the carrier.” Tell it to the judge. The class-action lawsuits have already begun.

    Carrier IQ speaks out: Points finger at networks, customers


    http://www.zdnet.com/blog/btl/carrie...28?tag=nl.e540
      My Computer


  7. Posts : 6,618
    W7x64 Pro, SuSe 12.1/** W7 x64 Pro, XP MCE
       #7

    The lawsuits shouldn't stop there, because Carrier IQ couldn't have put the rootkit there without the other manufacturers being aware of it.
      My Computer


  8. Posts : 752
    Windows
       #8

    Well, apparently BlackBerry smartphones are safe from this BS:

    Carrier IQ not installed on BlackBerry phones, says RIM | The Verge

    Since my phone is OEM, i don't know.. but i'll still check it :)
      My Computer


  9. Posts : 834
    Windows 7 Ultimate SP1 x64
       #9

    Video

    More info from XDA Dev: The Storm Is Not Over Yet – Lets Talk About #CIQ | xda-developers
    If you thought that the whole Security Saga was over and done with the triumph of the EFF and a very angry internet mob over CarrierIQ, you were sadly mistaken. You see? The fun part about doing research is that from time to time, you will run into bumps or things that will try to throw you off. I have personally done research for a few years and you will likely try to seek advise from the experts in the field of whatever you are trying to find. Our “experts” in this case are the good people over at CIQ, who so graciously decided to try and put a stop to the research last week. Well, as you are all aware by now, and as I stated a few moments ago, there was a formal apology letter posted by CarrierIQ on their website, which you can all read from the link that I just posted. However, there are a few items in here that we are not entirely happy with
    More: Carrier IQ Creeps Out Everyone | xda-developers
    Over the last week, Carrier IQ received quite a lot of attention. First, TrevE was served a Cease and Desist letter from Carrier IQ, including a prepared statement they insisted TrevE release on his website, denouncing his work. The Electronic Frontier Foundation responded on TrevE’s behalf, calling the C&D a violation of constitutional rights, and malicious. Carrier IQ apologized, calling the C&D, “misguided,” but made a statement denying many of the allegations.
    Then TrevE released a video proving that every single allegation that Carrier IQ denied their software was capable of doing, their software actually does. And apparently not even the mighty iPhone is free of Carrier IQ data mining.
      My Computer


 
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