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Android Google Government Privacy Software

Google Removes Android App That Was Used To Spy On Belarusian Protesters (zdnet.com) 26

Google has removed an Android app from the Play Store that was used to collect personal information from Belarusians attending anti-government protests. ZDNet reports: The app, named NEXTA LIVE, was available for almost three weeks on the official Android Play Store, and was downloaded thousands of times and received hundreds of reviews. To get installs, NEXT LIVE claimed to be the official Android app for Nexta, an independent Belarusian news agency that gained popularity with anti-Lukashenko protesters after exposing abuses and police brutality during the country's recent anti-government demonstrations. However, the app contained code to to collect geolocation data, gather info on the device owner, and then upload the data to a remote Russian server at regular intervals. [...] While there is no official link between the fake Nexta app and the Minsk government, this would hardly be the first time that a government would try to spy on its citizens in the midst of anti-government protests, in attempts to identify protest-goers.
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Google Removes Android App That Was Used To Spy On Belarusian Protesters

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  • What Happens NEXTA....

    • More like what happens next..... aaaaaaa.......
      • what happens next..... aaaaaaa.......

        In a post-Soviet world they don't have access to Siberian gulags.

        Unfortunately for the protesters, since there wasn't a revolution.

        • "In a post-Soviet world they don't have access to Siberian gulags."

          Old crusty stone prisons out in the middle of nowhere is so 20th century.

          The cool hip trend is small secret prisons where you get to spend your waterboarding vacation. Who knows, there could be one operating right under your favorate kale and carrot juice joint!

  • Bit late ain't it?

    Or is it just cleaning up after use?

  • In Australia they arrest people for organizing protests via Facebook: https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
    • by jonwil ( 467024 )

      The individual wasn't arrested for posting on Facebook, they were arrested because they were specifically calling for people to carry out an illegal act.

      If I made a post on Facebook calling for people to break into a store and steal stuff en mass, its not that different to if I walked into the store and stole stuff myself.

      As for whether protesting (or calling for people to protest) should be illegal or not, ask the relatives of the 500+ people who have died in Victoria as a result of this nasty virus (many

      • If I made a post on Facebook calling for people to break into a store and steal stuff en mass, its not that different to if I walked into the store and stole stuff myself.

        You'd have made a paragon Soviet apparatchik.

      • I don't know how this morphed from a stoey about protesting against police brutality and other government crimes, to her allegedly going WAA WAA because of Covid-19 restrictions, or how the fact that an app was being used to secretly track protestors movements was dropped from this discussion, but whatever.

        And this brings up two things:

        Governments can brutalize their citizens, and when a protest is held, a government can justify their retaliation with "Covid!".

        People should be able to download an app withou

  • "Download Super Happy Fun App! It's loads of fun!"

    (Local Gestapo does that knock in the night on the door of suspected protestor who downloaded Super Happy Fun App)

Top Ten Things Overheard At The ANSI C Draft Committee Meetings: (5) All right, who's the wiseguy who stuck this trigraph stuff in here?

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