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Topic Summary

Posted by: devnullius
« on: 27. April 2014., 10:28:44 »

I had the warez version... ;p

:)
Posted by: Samker
« on: 27. April 2014., 10:06:34 »

Google to refund buyers of 'fake' anti-virus app

Google has decided that a smallish (for The Chocolate Factory) wad of cash is a trivial price to pay for maintaining its reputation, and has begun refunding punters who fell for the fake “virus shield” scam.

Uncovered by Android Police earlier this month, the fake virus scanner was nothing more than an icon that changed shape when a user tapped it.

The app hit the number-one spot on Google Play before decompilation revealed its true nature and it was pulled – but that still meant that at least 10,000 users had paid $US3.99 for the app.

Now, Android Police has learned that Google is issuing refunds to purchasers, and giving them a $US5 Google Play Store credit: http://www.androidpolice.com/2014/04/19/google-issues-refunds-and-an-extra-5-play-store-credit-to-android-users-who-bought-the-phony-virus-shield-app/

According to Appbrain, downloads hit 30,000. At that scale, Google would only have to fork out $US120,000 in refunds.

The developer of the app, Jesse Carter, defended himself to The Guardian by saying the app upload was a mistake: http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/apr/10/fake-android-antivirus-app-developer-virus-shield
At the time, he'd promised to refund buyers, but El Reg notes that Google seems to have decided not to wait for Carter to issue refunds.

(ElReg)
Posted by: devnullius
« on: 08. April 2014., 19:13:07 »

I cannot be but a little impressed by the boldness of creating a totally empty app...

And then see all the upvotes coming in :>

übertroll!
Posted by: Samker
« on: 08. April 2014., 18:32:45 »



Security is an important factor when it comes to technology, and in most cases you can never have too much. In 2014, our smartphones know more about us than we know about ourselves, and if malware were to creep onto our smartphones then we could potentially suffer some major consequences. As a result, like any reasonable person, we would look to secure our device. This is what Deviant Solutions, the creator of the current #1 Play Store app, decided to capitalize on.

Virus Shield claims it is an antivirus that "protects you and your personal information from harmful viruses, malware, and spyware" and "Improve the speed of your phone," and it does this all with one click. It also claims to have a minimal impact on battery, run seamlessly in the background, and if that wasn't enough, it also acts as ad-block software that will stop those "pesky advertisements." This app costs $3.99, has been on the Play Store for just under two weeks and has already had 10,000 downloads with a 4.5 star review from 1,700 people. 2,607 people hit the Google "recommend" button. This means that the app must be doing something right... right?

Unfortunately for the buyers, Android Police has discovered that all the app does is change a red "X" graphic to a red "check" graphic. Literally. The 859kb app doesn't protect, secure, or scan anything. More work went into the Settings menu than the actual "security" portion of the app, and it appears that thousands of users have been scammed out of their money.

In tracking down the creator, it appeared that the creator was a well known scammer who had been banned from forums for trying to scam people out of low-valued online game items.

This calls into question some concerns about the openness of the Play Store. Is a walled-garden approach where the app goes through a strict review process, similar to what currently takes place in Apple's App Store, a better model for smartphones? Or does the freedom that comes from Google's approach outweigh the negatives of a bad app creeping in every now and then?

Google has just taken down the app a couple of hours ago and the link now returns a 404: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.deviant.security.shield

(NW)
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