Insurance company accused of using secret software to illegally collect and sell location data on millions of Americans (www.malwarebytes.com)
from kid@sh.itjust.works to cybersecurity@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jan 12:55
https://sh.itjust.works/post/31079896

#cybersecurity

threaded - newest

vk6flab@lemmy.radio on 14 Jan 13:12 next collapse

As opposed to say Apple, Microsoft or Google?

Zulu@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 13:30 next collapse

That probably IS the “secret” software. Lol Plug a phone into your car? Insurance company gets the info one way or another.

vk6flab@lemmy.radio on 14 Jan 13:37 collapse

Might even be as “sophisticated” as a Facebook advertisement…

UniversalMonk@sh.itjust.works on 14 Jan 14:06 collapse

As opposed to say, everybody. It’s so freakin’ hard to actually stay private these days. Annoying as fuck.

scsi@lemm.ee on 14 Jan 14:08 next collapse

emphasis mine, de-clickbaited

Insurance company Allstate and its subsidiary Arity unlawfully collected, used, and sold data about the location and movement of Texans’ cell phones through secretly embedded software in mobile apps, according to Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton.

Taokan@sh.itjust.works on 15 Jan 01:27 collapse

Lol. They were trying their damndest to get me and my family to install that. I’m like… there’s a bit of a conflict of interest there. I can see some value in having location data of your family, who’s driving too fast, if someone’s in an accident. I will absolutely not be sharing that data with the company that earns money for its shareholders by outperforming the statistical likelihood of paying me money, by finding every way possible to not pay me money.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 14 Jan 14:48 next collapse

I like the name and shame, maybe someday a company will care about the shame. But really, calling a phone app “secret software” is a lot stranger than an app sending info back to base.

dohpaz42@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 15:07 collapse

It’s my understanding that the “secret software” is not the app itself, but code embedded into the app, that track your location and send it back to Arity. And it’s not one particular app, but many apps that were paid to add the code.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 14 Jan 15:09 collapse

Well yeah. The apps main advetised purpose isn’t going to be “we track you and sell the data”. Every giant corporations app has tracking software embedded in it.

dohpaz42@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 15:13 next collapse

I’m going to go out on a limb and say you’re not understanding: it’s not only the insurance company’s app doing the tracking; it’s potentially any app that asks for location data.

Sometimes apps ask permission to use your location data and you find yourself wondering, why does this app need to know where my phone is?

This is one possible reason.

Whenever you are asked to share your location data with an app and there’s no clear reason why you might need to, deny the app that permission.

I’ll concede that maybe it’s me that is not understanding. 😊

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 14 Jan 15:17 collapse

Yes, that’s why it’s not “secret software”. They all do it.

Benjaben@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 17:27 collapse

We shouldn’t just roll over and take it though. I can’t tell if you’re saying “we should know better, of course they’re all doing this shit” - which I agree with - or closer to “it’s their app(s), they can do what they want, and we shouldn’t expect them to be transparent”, which I very much disagree with.

TachyonTele@lemm.ee on 15 Jan 02:34 collapse

Im definitely in the first camp.

WHARRGARBL@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 15:45 next collapse

Not refuting this standard practice of collecting and selling data, including location, but this “article” is from a security software marketing blog.

Also, fuckin Ken Paxton sues EVERYONE.

Anticorp@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 17:52 collapse

Cool. Punish them with jail time. No? No consequences you say? Okay then, I guess.

jaybone@lemmy.world on 14 Jan 22:24 collapse

Shocked. I am shocked.

Someone needs to SLAM them.