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Popular App Weather Forecast Collects Too Much User Data and is Attempting To Subscribe Some Users To Paid Services Without Permission (wsj.com) 57

A popular weather app built by a Chinese tech conglomerate has been collecting an unusual amount of data from smartphones around the world and attempting to subscribe some users to paid services without permission, according to a London-based security firm's research. From a report: The free app, one of the world's most-downloaded weather apps in Google's Play store, is from TCL Communication Technology Holdings, of Shenzhen, China. TCL makes Alcatel- and BlackBerry -branded phones, while a sister company makes televisions. The app, called "Weather Forecast --World Weather Accurate Radar," collects data including smartphone users' geographic locations, email addresses and unique 15-digit International Mobile Equipment Identity (IMEI) numbers on TCL servers in China, according to Upstream Systems, the mobile commerce and security firm that found the activity. Until last month, the app was known as "Weather -- Simple weather forecast."

The weather app also has attempted to surreptitiously subscribe more than 100,000 users of its low-cost Alcatel smartphones in countries such as Brazil, Malaysia and Nigeria to paid virtual-reality services, according to Upstream Systems. The security firm, which discovered the activity as part of its work for mobile operators, said users would have been billed more than $1.5 million had it not blocked the attempts.

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Popular App Weather Forecast Collects Too Much User Data and is Attempting To Subscribe Some Users To Paid Services Without Perm

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    There's an official app, just use that. Sure it's bloated to all hell and there's ads, but at least, you know your data ain't going to China.

  • https://guardianapp.com/ios-ap... [guardianapp.com]

    That is my best guess from a Google search. Could anybody read the article and see who the researchers are?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      NEW DELHI-A popular weather app built by a Chinese tech conglomerate has been collecting an unusual amount of data from smartphones around the world and attempting to subscribe some users to paid services without permission, according to a London-based security firm's research.

      The free app, one of the world's most-downloaded weather apps in Google's Play store, is from TCL Communication Technology Holdings Ltd., of Shenzhen, China. TCL makes Alcatel- and BlackBerry -branded phones, while a sister company ma

  • so whats the best open weather data network ?

    I'm not after predictions, just data

    • by Nidi62 ( 1525137 ) on Wednesday January 02, 2019 @10:18AM (#57891680)

      so whats the best open weather data network ?

      I'm not after predictions, just data

      A window?

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Calydor ( 739835 )

        You missed such a perfect chance to simply reply 'Windows' instead of 'A window'.

    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Anonymous Coward

      OpenWeatherMap's free public API is quite enough. That's what the FOSS apps seem to use.

    • I think that the xfce4 weather widget is the best weather utility I have EVER come across.

    • by theCoder ( 23772 )

      If you're in the US, the NOAA website at https://www.weather.gov/ [weather.gov] is probably your best bet. I know you can get radar images from there -- I clicked around enough at one point and found the raw frames nicely sorted by location. I'm fairly certain that's where all the weather sites get their data, anyway. With how bad places like Weather Underground has been getting lately (it keeps switching to a blank page on my smart phone for example and is otherwise insanely slow with all of its useless JS nonsense),

  • I'm shocked. Shocked I tell you!

    What has the world come to? You think you get a free app and suddenly you notice that it has a nefarious purpose. Wasn't teh interwebs supposed to be the place where you get everything for free?

    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      Sure, but it still leaves one wondering how a free app can subscribe people to paid services unless they gave it their credit card info in the first place.
  • fuck that link I'm not whitelisting
  • Forecastie was right there in the F-Droid store the whole time.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    If it's something you can only access online then skip the app and just use a web site bookmark

  • by cascadingstylesheet ( 140919 ) on Wednesday January 02, 2019 @12:09PM (#57892174) Journal
    So we can't trust China with a weather app, but nuclear reactors and AI are cool?
    • Actually, CHina is going to stop building Nuke reactors in China. They have SERIOUS QA issues on theirs. Oddly, they will continue building for other nations, AND GE is now using Chinese manufacturing for their AP1000+ systems.

      And ppl wonder why I do NOT want to see the large systems built in America.
  • for your data.
  • Shameless plug here, but if you have an iOS device (sorry, I've never tried android development) you might enjoy Xasteria's [ecuadors.net] weather report for astronomers/astrophotographers, which has no registration, no tracking, no ads. I don't usually promote the service since it is kind of "niche", but maybe there are /. ers into that stuff. Otherwise, the web service 7Timer [7timer.info] that it is based on, has non-astronomical predictions as well (based on NOAA data). I am donating the main server for that free service, so it als

  • "A popular weather app built by a Chinese tech conglomerate..." Say no more.
  • by mccrew ( 62494 ) on Wednesday January 02, 2019 @04:23PM (#57893854)
    It's also known as the "Wells Fargo App."

We are each entitled to our own opinion, but no one is entitled to his own facts. -- Patrick Moynihan

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