Vietnam security experts raise caution on Chinese smartphone privacy breach

Aug 16th at 16:40
16-08-2014 16:40:03+07:00

Vietnam security experts raise caution on Chinese smartphone privacy breach

Vietnamese smartphone users are advised to beware of Chinese-made handsets after a Beijing-based phone maker admitted recently it was collecting personal data without permission.

Xiaomi Inc vice president Hugo Barra last week apologized for collecting phone numbers in users' address books, but the move was done only “to see if the users are online,” he said in a blogpost on Google Plus.

The data breach, widely reported by media outlets in Taiwan, was discovered by Finnish security firm F-Secure Oyg, which said the Xiaomi’s Redmi Note smartphones would automatically collect data regardless of the users’ intervention.

In Vietnam, computer security firm Bkav asserted to Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper that Redmi Note has a built-in function that covertly collects personal data and transfers to the phone maker’s server in China.

“We have ample proof Redmi Note is designed to send data regarding the phone numbers of dialed and received calls and SMS to Xiaomi server,” Bkav deputy chairman of research and development Vu Ngoc Son said.

Even though there is a configuration setting that allows users to disable data auto backup, the handset would still continue its privacy breach when the function is turned off, Son added.

“This is an act of illegally collecting personal data from one of the largest phone makers in China,” the Bkav expert emphad.

Redmi 1S, another device produced by Xiaomi, has also been found to have secretly collected personal data without permission, according to F-Secure Oyg.

Data including users’ service provider, phone numbers, text messages would be transferred to Xiaomi server at api.account.xiaomi.com.

Xiaomi has admitted its data breach following the F-Secure discovery.

Earlier in June, Chinese newswire Yangtse Evening News reported that Xiaomi smartphone could "steal" personal details from bank cards through wireless communication.

Son of Bkav advised that users beware of the built-in apps on the smartphones, as they could steal their data.

“Users must have full knowledge of all of the apps on their devices, otherwise they should contact the phone manufacturers for clarification,” he said.

Xiaomi smartphones are popular in China and some Southeast Asian countries as they are equipped with modern technologies while bear very cheap prices.

The devices are unofficially imported to Vietnam and are on sale at many electronics stores and supermarkets.

But as Xiaomi does not have a representative office in Vietnam, users cannot complain or ask for warranty when their devices break.

tuoitrenews



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Tourism maintains growth despite adversity

The tourism sector maintained good growth in the first seven months of 2014 despite a fall in the number of Chinese-spoken tourists, according to the National...

Metro Cash & Carry’s business performance questioned

VietNamNet Bridge – Though revenue has increased by 24 times over the last 12 years and its network expanded to many areas, Metro Cash & Carry (MCC) has not paid...

SOEs slash costs by $638.5 million under gov't plan

 State-owned enterprises (SOEs) cut their operating costs last year by more than VND13.6 trillion (US$638.49 million).

Masan to buy brewery

 Masan Group or one of its affiliates, the Orchid Consultant Company Ltd, will buy the entire equity of LamKa Company Ltd.

Domestic gold demand posts sharp drop in second quarter

The demand for gold declined sharply by 42 per cent in volume and 48 per cent in value in the second quarter over the same period last year.

F&N Dairy ready to pay $81m for Vinamilk sharesthrough

F&N Dairy Investment Pte Ltd registered yesterday to buy 15 million shares of Vinamilk (VNM), bolstering its stake in the Vietnamese dairy company.

VN-UK trade increases again after slowdown

 With US$2.13 billion in half-year revenue, two-way trade between Viet Nam and the UK has picked up again after a long slowdown.

Master plan for Ninh Binh City unveiled

The northern province of Ninh Binh unveiled a master plan for Ninh Binh City to 2030 with a vision to 2050 at a ceremony yesterday.

VN could become world's top animal food exporter

Viet Nam has the potential to become the world's leading exporter of cattle feed in the near future, the Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Development has said.

Plan to lure foreign investors

Each province must define their competitive advantages and economic potential to assist the government in its foreign-investment decision-making, heard a seminar...


MOST READ


Back To Top