DrSmith
Newbie
I hope I am missing something, because I would love to use my Android phone for my banking and personal business. But I cannot see how it could possibly be secure unless you locked down the phone, did not install ANY public apps, and maybe worked with the phone manufacturer to produce a secure device. I don’t see any way the average user could possibly set up an Android device that is secure enough to ensure it was safe to create, store or transmit any personal data through it.
First of all, you are installing apps from third parties whose intentions you know absolutely nothing about. Even if they have a “privacy statement” about their app, you are supposed to just trust some kid operating out of his parent’s basement in Uganda and take his word for what he is or isn’t doing on your phone and with your data? I think you’d have to be nuts. And that doesn’t even address the fact that Google has its hooks so far into every single thing you type or say into that phone that, and knows so much more about you than your own mother does, that it’s just plain scary! And who knows how secure the information they have on you is? Do you even know where it resides or who has access to it?
Then you take that app from an unknown a person and grant it all kinds of “permissions” to access every detail on your phone and the ability to transmit it anywhere in the world, possibly without even your knowledge? Virtually any app that is useful enough to do important work also needs permissions that can potentially be used to steal your data and commit a crime against you.
Then there is this. Suppose you have an app to scan your documents and you use it on your phone for scanning documents with critical private information on it like your social security number or account numbers? If you’ve ever looked into this, the phone will store that document in like 5 different places on the phone, without your knowledge, making it difficult to even find and delete it completely from the phone. And it might easily store it in a way you can’t find it at all and don’t even know it’s there. In a flash it could transmit that document to someone anywhere in the world possibly even without your knowledge. And even if you are aware of it, by the time you notice it it is too late.
It’s like making a hundred copies of a private document, running out in the road on a windy day and throwing it up in the air.
Sounds to me that if you are using your Android device/phone to do anything you want to keep private, you are like an elephant hanging over a cliff with its tail tied to a daisy. (I’m sure it’s probably true of ios too although I don’t really know much about that os).
Yet, millions of people are using their phones and devices to handle secure data. Maybe that’s why the incidence of things cyber related crimes are careening out of control?
While still not perfect, especially for the average person who doesn’t understand computer security, at least with a computer you have a better shot at controlling your data. But Android devices are designed to be invasive. That’s how they work their magic. Without it, you have a dumb phone, not a smart one. That invasion of your privacy is a serious double sided sword. I don’t see any way I can trust it with my private business.
What am I missing?
First of all, you are installing apps from third parties whose intentions you know absolutely nothing about. Even if they have a “privacy statement” about their app, you are supposed to just trust some kid operating out of his parent’s basement in Uganda and take his word for what he is or isn’t doing on your phone and with your data? I think you’d have to be nuts. And that doesn’t even address the fact that Google has its hooks so far into every single thing you type or say into that phone that, and knows so much more about you than your own mother does, that it’s just plain scary! And who knows how secure the information they have on you is? Do you even know where it resides or who has access to it?
Then you take that app from an unknown a person and grant it all kinds of “permissions” to access every detail on your phone and the ability to transmit it anywhere in the world, possibly without even your knowledge? Virtually any app that is useful enough to do important work also needs permissions that can potentially be used to steal your data and commit a crime against you.
Then there is this. Suppose you have an app to scan your documents and you use it on your phone for scanning documents with critical private information on it like your social security number or account numbers? If you’ve ever looked into this, the phone will store that document in like 5 different places on the phone, without your knowledge, making it difficult to even find and delete it completely from the phone. And it might easily store it in a way you can’t find it at all and don’t even know it’s there. In a flash it could transmit that document to someone anywhere in the world possibly even without your knowledge. And even if you are aware of it, by the time you notice it it is too late.
It’s like making a hundred copies of a private document, running out in the road on a windy day and throwing it up in the air.
Sounds to me that if you are using your Android device/phone to do anything you want to keep private, you are like an elephant hanging over a cliff with its tail tied to a daisy. (I’m sure it’s probably true of ios too although I don’t really know much about that os).
Yet, millions of people are using their phones and devices to handle secure data. Maybe that’s why the incidence of things cyber related crimes are careening out of control?
While still not perfect, especially for the average person who doesn’t understand computer security, at least with a computer you have a better shot at controlling your data. But Android devices are designed to be invasive. That’s how they work their magic. Without it, you have a dumb phone, not a smart one. That invasion of your privacy is a serious double sided sword. I don’t see any way I can trust it with my private business.
What am I missing?