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Big Price Difference!
2011-09-28 14:01:02
Security Hole In Android
2011-05-18 10:24:41
Blog from Dan Wallach, professor in the Department of Computer Science at Rice University in Houston, Texas:
Publication from German University Ulm:
Catching AuthTokens in the Wild The Insecurity of Google's ClientLogin Protocol
Quote
Today in my undergraduate security class, we set up a sniffer so we could run Wireshark and Mallory to listen in on my Android smartphone. This blog piece summarizes what we found.
Google properly encrypts traffic to Gmail and Google Voice, but they don't encrypt traffic to Google Calendar. An eavesdropper can definitely see your calendar transactions and can likely impersonate you to Google Calendar.
Twitter does everything in the clear, but then your tweets generally go out for all the world to see, so there isn't really a privacy concern. Twitter uses OAuth signatures, which appear to make it difficult for a third party to create forged tweets.
Facebook does everything in the clear, much like Twitter. My Facebook account's web settings specify full-time encrypted traffic, but this apparently isn't honored or supported by Facebook's Android app. Facebook isn't doing anything like OAuth signatures, so it may be possible to inject bogus posts as well. Also notable: one of the requests we saw going from my phone to the Facebook server included an SQL statement within. Could Facebook's server have a SQL injection vulnerability? Maybe it was just FQL, which is ostensibly safe.
The free version of Angry Birds, which uses AdMob, appears to preserve your privacy. The requests going to the AdMob server didn't have anything beyond the model of my phone. When I clicked an ad, it sent the (x,y) coordinates of my click and got a response saying to send me to a URL in the web browser.
Another game I tried, Galcon, had no network activity whatsoever. Good for them.
SoundHound and ShopSaavy transmit your fine GPS coordinates whenever you make a request to them. One of the students typed the coordinates into Google
Maps and they nailed me to the proper side of the building I was teaching in.
What options do Android users have, today, to protect themselves against eavesdroppers? Android does support several VPN configurations which you could configure before you hit the road. That won't stop the unnecessary transmission of your fine GPS coordinates, which, to my mind, neither SoundHound nor ShopSaavy have any business knowing. If that's an issue for you, you could turn off your GPS altogether, but you'd have to turn it on again later when you want to use maps or whatever else. Ideally, I'd like the Market installer to give me the opportunity to revoke GPS privileges for apps like these.
Google properly encrypts traffic to Gmail and Google Voice, but they don't encrypt traffic to Google Calendar. An eavesdropper can definitely see your calendar transactions and can likely impersonate you to Google Calendar.
Twitter does everything in the clear, but then your tweets generally go out for all the world to see, so there isn't really a privacy concern. Twitter uses OAuth signatures, which appear to make it difficult for a third party to create forged tweets.
Facebook does everything in the clear, much like Twitter. My Facebook account's web settings specify full-time encrypted traffic, but this apparently isn't honored or supported by Facebook's Android app. Facebook isn't doing anything like OAuth signatures, so it may be possible to inject bogus posts as well. Also notable: one of the requests we saw going from my phone to the Facebook server included an SQL statement within. Could Facebook's server have a SQL injection vulnerability? Maybe it was just FQL, which is ostensibly safe.
The free version of Angry Birds, which uses AdMob, appears to preserve your privacy. The requests going to the AdMob server didn't have anything beyond the model of my phone. When I clicked an ad, it sent the (x,y) coordinates of my click and got a response saying to send me to a URL in the web browser.
Another game I tried, Galcon, had no network activity whatsoever. Good for them.
SoundHound and ShopSaavy transmit your fine GPS coordinates whenever you make a request to them. One of the students typed the coordinates into Google
Maps and they nailed me to the proper side of the building I was teaching in.
What options do Android users have, today, to protect themselves against eavesdroppers? Android does support several VPN configurations which you could configure before you hit the road. That won't stop the unnecessary transmission of your fine GPS coordinates, which, to my mind, neither SoundHound nor ShopSaavy have any business knowing. If that's an issue for you, you could turn off your GPS altogether, but you'd have to turn it on again later when you want to use maps or whatever else. Ideally, I'd like the Market installer to give me the opportunity to revoke GPS privileges for apps like these.
Publication from German University Ulm:
Catching AuthTokens in the Wild The Insecurity of Google's ClientLogin Protocol
3Bb Cheating Customers?
2010-07-29 16:08:21
Location: Phuket, Provider: 3BB, Package: 3BB Premier 4 Mb
3BB Speed Test
9.JPG 44.07K
38 downloads
Go to Speedtest.net, direct or via 3BB Speed test, made a Test to San Francisco (result below)
Calculation:
Distance San Francisco 12’700km.
Ping Distance: 25’400km
Light speed: ~ 299’792 km/s (Fiber Optic cable ~ 200’000 km/s)
Distance/Light speed = 0.085 sec = 85ms (theoretically), without additional delay time from Amplifiers, Multiplexers, Nodes.
Conclusion: 55ms impossible, Speedtest wrong, Server local, just around the corner.
Real Ping Test:
San Francisco= www.unwiredltd.com , IP= 204.11.106.53, Ping = 269ms (avg)
(Unwired, 7125 Westmoorland Drive, Berkeley CA 94705, US.
Left redirected fake targets, right real links of neighboring target locations.
a.JPG 48.53K
53 downloads
b.JPG 48.3K
35 downloads
c.JPG 48.03K
17 downloads
In Speedtest.net this Destinations are redirected to a local Server (3BB?): USA SF: 55ms, London: 51ms, Paris: 53ms
Taiwan Tunghai: 53 ms, USA WDC: 65 ms, UK London: 54 ms, Paris F: 53 ms, Los Angeles: 51 ms, may be more.
3BB Speed Test
9.JPG 44.07K
38 downloadsGo to Speedtest.net, direct or via 3BB Speed test, made a Test to San Francisco (result below)
Calculation:
Distance San Francisco 12’700km.
Ping Distance: 25’400km
Light speed: ~ 299’792 km/s (Fiber Optic cable ~ 200’000 km/s)
Distance/Light speed = 0.085 sec = 85ms (theoretically), without additional delay time from Amplifiers, Multiplexers, Nodes.
Conclusion: 55ms impossible, Speedtest wrong, Server local, just around the corner.
Real Ping Test:
San Francisco= www.unwiredltd.com , IP= 204.11.106.53, Ping = 269ms (avg)
(Unwired, 7125 Westmoorland Drive, Berkeley CA 94705, US.
Left redirected fake targets, right real links of neighboring target locations.
a.JPG 48.53K
53 downloads
b.JPG 48.3K
35 downloads
c.JPG 48.03K
17 downloadsIn Speedtest.net this Destinations are redirected to a local Server (3BB?): USA SF: 55ms, London: 51ms, Paris: 53ms
Taiwan Tunghai: 53 ms, USA WDC: 65 ms, UK London: 54 ms, Paris F: 53 ms, Los Angeles: 51 ms, may be more.
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