I am looking for someone who may develop a streaming application that catch incoming data of another application which does the function of reflecting on the screen a strip when incoming data and you have to touch the screen fast to capture data and send a response accepting it. I would like some application that does the work without being reflected on the screen but send the data to catch it before appears on screen.
FOR MORE DETAILS ABOUT WHAT APP IS PLEASE REPLY, AND WE TALK IN PRIVATE.
Related
Hi all,
Check out this scenerio and let me know your thoughts.
You know that app.apk is installed as a background service. Via looking into the manifest file you know all the intent filters they are using and all the permissions they are utilizing.
If you want to eavesdrop and intercept the message traffic app.apk generates as it is listening and sending information to its remote server, is that possible? In what ways would go about doing that?
I would think this should be possible via intent filters and Xlistener methods.
Extra info:
The manifest declares the following permissions:
Internet, read phone state, wake lock, receive boot completed, acce fine location, access coarse location, access wifi state, receive sms, read sms, send sms, read contacts, disable keygaurd, persistant activity, vibrate, get tasks, kill background process, restart packages, write settings, call phone, modify audio settings, process outgoing calls.
All of those permissions have an associated intent filter. All of the data is stored in shared preference.
I know that's a scary list of permissions..I'm looking into the possible security flaws of this app in order to make it safer.
Thanks
I'm after the advice of someone who knows about Android permissions and security.
I'd like to make use of this app - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.faradayinstitute&hl=en
That requires these permissions:
This app has access to these permissions:
Your messages
receive text messages (SMS)
Network communication
full network access
view network connections
view Wi-Fi connections
Phone calls
read phone status and identity
Storage
modify or delete the contents of your USB storage
Microphone
record audio
Your social information
read your contacts
modify your contacts
read call log
write call log
Your accounts
find accounts on the device
System tools
send sticky broadcast
test access to protected storage
Affects battery
control vibration
prevent device from sleeping
Your applications information
run at startup
Audio settings
change your audio settings
But isn't that list of permissions completely OTT? I expressed my concerns to them and received the following reply:
I am writing to update you with regards to your enquiry about the Faraday App. I have been in touch with our developers and they have informed me that although this is a long list it is quite common with Android. They are currently working to see if they can reduce the list, however, there is nothing to worry about since you know the origin of there App, The Faraday Institute, and therefore can easily determine whether you wish to allow access (if it is a source you trust/is reputable etc..). The reason they need access to some parts is simply to add their details to your phone, (access your phone book for example is only to add The Faraday to your contacts).
I hope this answers your query for now. I will update you when I receive more information from the developers. Please feel free to contact me if you require further assistance.
I'm no expert but it doesn't really seem satisfactory - or am I worrying necessarily?
Ergates said:
I'm after the advice of someone who knows about Android permissions and security.
I'd like to make use of this app - https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.faradayinstitute&hl=en
That requires these permissions:
This app has access to these permissions:
Your messages
receive text messages (SMS)
Network communication
full network access
view network connections
view Wi-Fi connections
Phone calls
read phone status and identity
Storage
modify or delete the contents of your USB storage
Microphone
record audio
Your social information
read your contacts
modify your contacts
read call log
write call log
Your accounts
find accounts on the device
System tools
send sticky broadcast
test access to protected storage
Affects battery
control vibration
prevent device from sleeping
Your applications information
run at startup
Audio settings
change your audio settings
But isn't that list of permissions completely OTT? I expressed my concerns to them and received the following reply:
I am writing to update you with regards to your enquiry about the Faraday App. I have been in touch with our developers and they have informed me that although this is a long list it is quite common with Android. They are currently working to see if they can reduce the list, however, there is nothing to worry about since you know the origin of there App, The Faraday Institute, and therefore can easily determine whether you wish to allow access (if it is a source you trust/is reputable etc..). The reason they need access to some parts is simply to add their details to your phone, (access your phone book for example is only to add The Faraday to your contacts).
I hope this answers your query for now. I will update you when I receive more information from the developers. Please feel free to contact me if you require further assistance.
I'm no expert but it doesn't really seem satisfactory - or am I worrying necessarily?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
what kind of app is it? (currently unable to access playstore)
mjz2cool said:
what kind of app is it? (currently unable to access playstore)
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Just a "news" app. Here's the description:
The official application of The Faraday Institute for Science and Religion at St Edmund's College, Cambridge. Access news, leading stories of the day, educational resources, and much more, from the institute that is leading research in the understanding of the relation between science and religion.
Bump
Ergates said:
Bump
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
And once more for luck!
Ergates said:
And once more for luck!
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
Any views?
Hi there! I got my Nokia N8 with Guardian (Symbian Toys) installed and heavily hidden and embedded in the custom firmware (no success in receiving the "stolen phone" sms yet, so there are very little chances to get my phone back. Or the thief knows what he does and flashed the phone again or he threw my old brick away). With that sms I could control my phone remotely with sms instructions without the new "owner" noticing it.
Anyway, I bought a Lumia 625 but excluding the super sensitive touch and high camera quality (not the 626 itself...), Nokia with WP is not acceptable for my needs. Too closed.
So, I'm gonna switch to Android.
What I would like is a theft-proof phone. Is there any super app/s or rom to make my phone unstealable??
My ideas are:
An unlock app that takes a picture with the front camera and sends it to my cloud or another email address or mms instatly if the lock code is wrong at the first attempt.
An app similar to Guardian (Symbian Toys) that sends an sms or email or whatever with the number of the unathorized sim, gps coordinates and a picture from front and rear camera + complete remote control of the phone in hidden mode. This app should also lock some seleceted apps (google play store, whatsapp, skype, received sms, gallery, videos, file manager...)
An unflashable rom without inserting a password + ecrypted microsd. The thief should not be able to read the sd card or the content of the mass memory of the phone if pluggen into a computer.
Pure fantasy? hahaha ...hope not completely....
My company is going to be switching to MobileIron application to use with our smart phones. My question is what data/information is captured and retained. I would assume all work emails would be captured and accessible through this application by the company. But does the company have access to photos, text messages, search history, phone calls, etc. on my phone. Basically I'm asking how big of a big brother is MobileIron for my phone?
NoClemency said:
My company is going to be switching to MobileIron application to use with our smart phones. My question is what data/information is captured and retained. I would assume all work emails would be captured and accessible through this application by the company. But does the company have access to photos, text messages, search history, phone calls, etc. on my phone. Basically I'm asking how big of a big brother is MobileIron for my phone?
Click to expand...
Click to collapse
My company is using MobileIron. MobileIron has access to I guess everything on my phone. So I suppose my employer can get access to all my personal data. Keep track of where I am going. Monitor my calls ... It's frightening. I often wanted to delete all this stuff from my phone. But so far I didn't do this because then I loose access to my work-agenda when I am on the road.
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