Sie sind auf Seite 1von 3

ALL NEWS

APPLE GUIDES

ASK ARS REVIEWS

BUSINESS

GADGETS

GAMING

MICROSOFT

OPEN SOURCE

SCIENCE

TECH POLICY

MORE

SEARCH

FUTURE OF CARS

Upgrade to a Premier Subscription

Customize

OpenForum

Login/Join

Major privacy flaw found in Dolphin HD browser for Android


By Ryan Paul | Published 2 days ago

Increase text size Reduce text size Print this story Leave a comment (66) http://arst.ch/ret

Dolphin HD has long been our favorite third-party Web browser for Android. Its excellent tabbed user interface, add-on system, and gesture support have made it a popular choice among Android enthusiasts. But recent versions of the browser have introduced a startling privacy flaw. Discussions in the XDA forums and a report published on the Android Police blog yesterday revealed that every URL loaded in Dolphin HD is relayed as plain text to a remote server. The article includes screenshots from a packet sniffer that clearly demonstrate the issueits an unambiguous breach of privacy. In response to the resulting controversy, the company behind Dolphin issued a statement explaining the situation. Recent versions of Dolphin introduced a feature called Webzine that offers a specialized presentation of websites. When a user visits a website, the URL is relayed to Dolphins servers which determine whether the Webzine view is supported for the specified destination. The company contends that the data is not collected or retained. It subsequently issued an update to disable the feature and said that it will be made opt-in in future versions. As a frequent user of Dolphin HD, I was disappointed by this privacy blunder. In addition to failing to inform users of this dubious practice up front, Dolphins developers also made poor implementation decisions that exacerbated the privacy risk. Its fortunate that the Android enthusiast community detected this behavior. Click here to view the 66 comments on this story

LATEST TOP STORIES


Like 78 21

191

Share/Email Kinect for Windows SDK going commercial in early 2012

Read more stories


Recommend this?

< Older Story | Newer Story >

Halloween Masterpiece: Fatal Frame 2 is the scariest game ever made 4G LTE version of Samsung Galaxy S II, HTC Vivid to debut on AT&T Native JavaScript H.264 decoder offers compelling demo of JS performance Never say die: why HP should open up webOS instead of killing it

Private browsing: it's Pirates offer Justin Bieber: not so private Windows 7 on USB streaming bill author sticks should be "locked up"

More than just sexy phones: how Nokia will help sell Windows Phone 7

FreeBieber campaign is not afraid of Justin Bieber or his lawyers

Verizon's only LTE QWERTY phone: hands on with the Samsung Stratosphere You tell us: why do IT shops block employee Macs more than PCs? Alone as a crowd: the latest example of the weirdness of quantum mechanics The seed of something great: Acorn 3.1 reviewed Shuttleworth: Ubuntu is heading to phones and tablets The right to dual-boot: Linux groups plead case prior to Windows 8 launch Creditor moves to dismantle copyright troll Righthaven Graphene-based transistors may be on the horizon Week in gaming: Battlefield 3 is only bad if
converted by Web2PDFConvert.com

you play it alone Week in Apple: 10-year iPod anniversary edition

Ars Technica on Facebook


Like 53,997

Sign Up

Create an account or log in to see what your friends are doing.

Climate skeptics perform independent analysis, finally convinced Earth is getting warmer 1,698 people recommend this. Ten years of Windows XP: how longevity became a curse 787 people recommend this. Translation algorithms used to crack centuries-old secret code 667 people recommend this. Could this quantum computer be the real deal? 298 people recommend this. Justin Bieber: streaming bill author should be "locked up" 183 people recommend this.
F acebook social plugin

Disable Facebook on Ars

DON'T MISS: PROMOS & INSIGHT

Promo: Consumerization of IT: Ars explores mobility, social media, and rapid development cycles.

converted by Web2PDFConvert.com

Job.Ars: looking for a new job?


IT Consultant at New Signature
Washington, DC

Database Administrator - SQL Server at BioWare


Austin, Tx

ASP.NET/C# Developers at Schoolnet Inc. Pearson Education


New York, NY

PHP Developer at Keane HR Consulting


Atlanta, GA

UI ENGINEER at New York Media


NEW YORK, NEW YORK

SharePoint Architect, Information Technology Services at University of Toronto


Downtown T oronto, Ontario, Canada

Sr. Analyst / Architect / Manager Hospital Interface at Bedside Clinical Systems


T oronto, ON | CANADA

Applications Programmer at Hampton Products International Corp


Irvine CA

Backend Software Engineer at David All Group


Washington, DC

Freelance Web Developer at Roy Rosenzweig Center for History and New Media
Fairfax, VA

MORE JOB LISTINGS

Serving the technologist for 1.3408 10 -1 centuries

SITE LINKS Front Page About Us Advertise with us Press Information Ars Technica TV SITE HELP Contact Us General F AQ Reprints

SUBSCRIPTIONS Subscribe to Ars Subscription F AQ MORE READING RSS Feeds Twitter Newsletters

COND NAST SITES Reddit Wired Vanity Fair Style Details Visit our sister sites Subscribe to a magazine View mobile site

Registration on or use of this site constitutes acceptance of our user agreement and privacy policy (REVISED AUGUST 1, 2011). Ars T echnica 2011 Cond Nast Digital. All rights reserved. The material on this site may not be reproduced, distributed, transmitted, cached or otherwise used, except with the prior written permission of Cond Nast Digital. Ad Choices

converted by Web2PDFConvert.com

Das könnte Ihnen auch gefallen