--- title: "7 in 10 smartphone apps share your data with third-party services" date: 2017-05-31T12:05:00+06:00 draft: false tags: ["tech","data privacy","surveillance","infosec"] author: "9x0rg" hidemeta: false ShowReadingTime: true ShowPostNavLinks: true showtoc: false cover: image: "" alt: "" caption: "" relative: false # To use relative path for cover image, used in hugo Page-bundles --- > Our mobile phones can [reveal a lot about ourselves](http://www.pewinternet.org/2015/04/01/chapter-two-usage-and-attitudes-toward-smartphones/): where we live and work; who our family, friends and acquaintances are; how (and even what) we communicate with them; and our personal habits. > > The research that we and our colleagues are doing identifies and explores a significant threat that most people miss: [More than 70 percent](https://haystack.mobi/) of smartphone apps are reporting personal data to [third-party tracking companies](https://arxiv.org/pdf/1609.07190.pdf) like Google Analytics, the Facebook Graph API or Crashlytics. > > We found that more than [70 percent of the apps we studied](https://www.haystack.mobi/panopticon) connected to at least one tracker, and 15 percent of them connected to five or more trackers. One in every four trackers harvested at least one unique device identifier, such as the phone number or its device-specific unique [15-digit IMEI number](http://www.gsma.com/managedservices/mobile-equipment-identity/about-imei/). > >-- Narseo Vallina-Rodriguez & Srikanth Sundaresan in [The Conversation](https://theconversation.com/7-in-10-smartphone-apps-share-your-data-with-third-party-services-72404) May 30, 2017