Catch up on stories from the past week (and beyond) at the Slashdot story archive

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Privacy Bug

Samsung Phones Are Spontaneously Texting Users' Photos To Random Contacts Without Their Permission (theverge.com) 111

Some Samsung smartphones are randomly sending pictures from the device to a user's contacts without explicit permission, according to users and media outlets. From a report: Users are complaining about the issue on Reddit and the company's official forums. One user says his phone sent all his photos to his girlfriend. The messages are being sent through Samsung's default texting app Samsung Messages, and the photos are being sent as SMS messages. According to reports, the Messages app does not even show users that files have been sent; many just find out after they get a response from the recipient of the random photos sent to them. Samsung told the news outlet it was aware of the issue and was looking into it.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Samsung Phones Are Spontaneously Texting Users' Photos To Random Contacts Without Their Permission

Comments Filter:
  • *Looks down at LG V30* "Good boy"
  • by Anonymous Coward

    How's that agile development coming along?

    • How's that agile development coming along?

      I assume from this comment you've never gotten an OTA update from your carrier for a Samsung or any other brand. They're months and months between; hardly agile.

      • by rickb928 ( 945187 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @05:04PM (#56882448) Homepage Journal

        It's not the release schedule that's Agile, its' the development process...

        • by Anonymous Coward

          It's amazed me that it's called "Agile" when it's the MOST rigid and inflexible process from the developer point of view. The schedule is not allowed to slip by even a single day, ever.

          Imagine getting your hair cut. Everything is going well, great haircut, then at the last minute, when she's doing the edges and finishing touches free hand with those electric clippers, you yell "QUICK!!! HURRY UP!!!!1!!!!"

          That's like the last day of a sprint. Rush through those last critical details so you can make the s

          • The sprint is suppose to let shit slide to the next sprint. That's the whole point of regular mini-releases.

            That doesn't help with hard endpoint feature demands by customers, but that's longer-term whole project planning.

        • It's not the release schedule that's Agile, its' the development process...

          Deployment to production is the last step of an Agile sprint. Otherwise you're doing Agile halfassed.

          • Of course, slipping to another sprint is actually not deploying, so the last step is sometimes just a sprint away...

            Though around here we see sprints complete, release to production, but of course the 'release' is actually part of the intended release. Parsing the meaning of 'release' is a sport on my team. I'm too optimistic, and usually lose the bet.

  • by HarrySquatter ( 1698416 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @04:58PM (#56882396)

    A followup question is: How many wang pics were sent out because of this?

  • Samsung == nope (Score:5, Insightful)

    by djbckr ( 673156 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @04:59PM (#56882410)
    Some years ago, a co-worker of mine showed me his Samsung phone. It was a beauty, and he let me play with it for a bit. The hardware was wonderful. The proprietary Samsung crap-ware that was on it was what made me decide that I would never get a Samsung phone. It's just like the branded crap-ware on Windows machines. I have a Nexus 6P and I think it's wonderful. It's Android the way it was intended. Yes, I know Google spies on me.
    • This is one of the big reasons I just moved away from Samsung phones after many years. I've had Samsung since the original Galaxy S, then an S3, then an S5. The STUFF was still running Android 4.4 and never got updates. They also had more and more bloatware with each generation. Finally broke down and bought a new One plus 6 last week. Hardly and bloat at all. Much like my wife's Nexus.
    • BINGO. Great hardware - SHIT software.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      I couldn't agree more. Had the Nexus 5 for 3 years. Got an LG G5 just as the G6 came out. Forgot how much crap they also install. One year later, after screen burn, gps issues and the vibrate function not working I discovered the android one project. It's like what the Nexus brand used to be. Loving my Nokia 7 plus with no bloat and guaranteed updates for 2+ years. Pixel range is far too overpriced.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      My brother has one that just got the Oreo update (Galaxy S6 I think) and they actually removed a lot of the crapware. I hear they are going to produce a pure Android version of their latest one too.

      Seems that after so very long Samsung has realized there is demand for bloat-free phones. I'm currently using a Pixel XL but Samsung hardware is quite attractive (good camera, SD card, wireless charging, replaceable battery, waterproof, USB, headphone jack) so if they do make a pure Android version I'll consider

  • by mveloso ( 325617 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @05:16PM (#56882518)

    Samsung is just trying to show that it cares by connecting you with your friends.

  • by LynnwoodRooster ( 966895 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @05:21PM (#56882558) Journal
    I blame Bixby, about the worst digital "assistant" I've ever seen. I bet that Bixby is "interpreting" actions or words to do something stupid...
    • by nwf ( 25607 )

      I blame Bixby, about the worst digital "assistant" I've ever seen. I bet that Bixby is "interpreting" actions or words to do something stupid...

      That's probably the answer. They added bixby for marketing reasons, since all the cool kids have digital assistants and they needed one as well. It's just that they can't write decent software. Having had a Samsung phone for doing Android development, I know I'll never get another one because their software is just so bad.

      • I'm not a fan of Samsung software, but I so freaking love the Note... I'm a "write it down/sketch it out" kind of guy, and having an essentially endless notebook with me at all times it so convenient. If someone else came out with a phone with a decent stylus/note-taking/sketching tool, I'd jump in a heartbeat. But until then... At least in the meantime I've disabled the Bixby button!
    • Even when it's "Turned Off" - Samsung needs to seriously stop trying to make software, they are really bad at it and keep doing it despite knowing that they are just driving their customers away. They are bordering on insanity with this, same as sprint and verizon - obviously piss poor bottom level software developers yet ;they keep doing it.
  • by cdsparrow ( 658739 ) on Monday July 02, 2018 @05:41PM (#56882676)

    Who gets arrested when it sends out nude selfies from someone under 18? The coders? The CEO of Samsung?

    Lawyers love this kind of stuff, lol

    • the person who took them...obviously (self referential humor)
    • Hm.

      If the person sending it is under 18, I believe the answer is "both." It's kiddie porn, after all.

      Now, as an adult, if my phone accidentally sent a dick pic to someone under 18, I suppose I would be charged with some sort of sex crime but the person receiving it would be fine.

    • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

      Sadly it would probably be the victim going to jail, because in many jurisdictions merely taking such photos would be a crime.

      • By victim you mean the person who made the child pornography. :-)

        Yeah I get what you're saying, but the law doesn't understand.

  • Samsung = android = bloatware
  • Considering Samsung's ongoing anti-Apple marketing campaign, this just made me laugh.

  • Now I have an excuse for sending that pic to the hot chick in accounting. 'twasn't me, it was the phone! Drop that harassment suit already, dammit!

    Besides, that's not a bathing suit. It's a tan line.

  • at the dawn of the consumer digital age: a world in which combines unprecedented convenience with unprecedented complexity and unpredictability.

    For every prior generation convenience, simplicity and predictability were effectively synonymous.

  • As a Samsung owner I am super excited about this feature. This will save me the time and money required to get blackout drunk and do this myself.
  • Samsung has become a toxic cesspool in technical division- Korean counterparts try to steal good projects from engineers abroad and try to sell it as their own. They track with hawk's eye on who is doing what. As soon as they see if there's anything special going on, they swoop and try to snatch it.

    Another set of issue is dominance- Learning department and security depart dominate over engineers. Engineers' belongings are checked when they are leaving, and not when they enter the building. If anything i

As the trials of life continue to take their toll, remember that there is always a future in Computer Maintenance. -- National Lampoon, "Deteriorata"

Working...