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Angry Birds developers downplay fresh data leak claims

  • April 1, 2014
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Petrovic
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The developers of Angry Birds have hit back at renewed allegations that the ultra-popular game leaks users' personal information.
Security vendor FireEye put out a detailed critique of Angry Birds last week claiming that the smartphone game leaked data like a sieve.
 An early March update of Angry Birds, available through Google Play, works together with ad-mediation platform Burstly and third-party ad networks such as Jumptap and Millennial Media to store and share users information. FireEye researchers warn that the system as a whole is insecure. As a result, users' personal email addresses, ages and genders entered into Angry Birds' servers are potentially being gathered, stored and shared across the web, they claim.
Rovio, the Finnish firm behind Angry Birds, downplayed these concerns while adding that it was migrating towards its own ad platform.
Millions of commercial web sites and mobile applications across all industries, use third party ad networks. Our fans trust is the most important thing to us. Rovio does not require end users to share data. The traffic between our games and the Rovio cloud is always encrypted. Rovio does not allow any third party network to use or hand over personal end-user data from Rovio’s games. In addition, Rovio is increasingly moving towards managing its own ad platform.'
Rovio's analytics and data usage policy is here. Its privacy policy is here.
Back in January a leak from the Snowden files revealed that GCHQ and the NSA were slurping data leaked from smartphone apps such as Angry Birds.
 
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  • October 4, 2014
The following article is a update on Angry Bird
(Destructive Android Trojan poses as newest Angry Birds game)
Author: Zeljka Zorz HNS Managing Editor/ Posted on 10/3/2014
 
Android malware masquerading as a legitimate app or game being offered on online app stores is not a rare occurrence, but purposefully destructive malware that does not ask for ransom is.

Dr. Web researchers have recently analyzed a new Android Trojan that falls in the category they call "vandal programs."

Detected as Android.Elite.1.origin, the Trojan impersonates a game that combines Rovio's popular Angry Bird and Hasbro's Transformers franchise and which is to be released later this month.

The malware creators seem to have used graphic elements from the game's official site to make the app seem legitimate.


http://www.net-security.org/images/articles/abt-03102014.jpg

Once the fake app is launched, it asks the user to grant it access to the device’s administrative features - ostensibly to work as it should, but actually to be able to perform the following destructive and disruptive actions:

 
 
Help Net Security/ article/ http://www.net-security.org/malware_news.php?id=2877