In a matter of less than two weeks, the Carrier IQ controversy blew up and became the mainstream topic in national newspapers and evening newscast. The idea that over a hundred million cell phone owners weren’t aware of an app that secretly collect personal information without their consent has had privacy advocates cry foul.
Making the privacy scare even more scary, The Federal Bureau of Investigation refused to release information about its own use of Carrier IQ in response to the request under the Freedom of Information Act filed December 1 by Michael Morisy. David Hardy, who’s with the Bureau, replied:
That the agency wasn’t forthcoming to Morisy’s request to release any manuals and documents outlining their use of data gathered by Carrier IQ only serves to underscore the lack of transparency on their part, if not a waste of taxpayers’ money. That’s not to say that Big Brother is monitoring your calls or eavesdropping on your messaging all the time, but the Bureau clearly has had this capability for a long time and could be working with Carrier IQ to downplay the media outrage.
UPDATE: Carrier IQ reacted to the FBI statement, telling VentureBeat it doesn’t don’t give your data to the FBI or any other law enforcement for that matter. “Just to clarify all of the media frenzy around the FBI, Carrier IQ has never provided any data to the FBI”, a company spokesperson said.
As we repeatedly stressed, Carrier IQ is the mobile industry’s worst kept secret. Carrier IQ CEO Larry Lenhart and vice president of marketing Andrew Coward sat down with AllThingsD’s John Paczkowski to discuss the controversial data mining software. In damage control mode, the two executives pretty much admitted to Carrier IQ’s keylogger-like capabilities and sucking your SMS messages into the cloud…
Asked whether a newly discovered bug was to blame for the collection of users’ text messages, Coward replied:
Some ‘bug’, you’ll agree…
Coward’s response runs counter to his company’s original press statement maintaining that Carrier IQ “does not record, store or transmit the contents of SMS messages, email, photographs, audio or video”. Now, Coward didn’t specify which phone brands or models might have been plagued by this issue, but it’s safe to assume all devices running the app are probably affected. Apple on its part confirmed existence of Carrier IQ in iOS 5 and said it plans to “remove it completely in a future software update”.
Asked to comment on Trevor Eckhart’s finding that Carrier IQ is collecting logs on Android devices containing sensitive phone and user information, which he documented in a video, Coward went on to argue it was just an Android system log file. The file was never captured by his company nor was it stored or taken off the device, he explained, adding:
Cross-posted on 9to5Google.com.
- Carrier IQ and Android: demystification (9to5google.com)
- Video of Carrier IQ backs up researcher’s claims of tracking capabilities (9to5google.com)
- Find out if Carrier IQ is on your device with a free detector app (9to5google.com)
- Confirmed: Google isn’t affiliated with Carrier IQ (9to5google.com)