mobile privacy
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2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ming Yang ◽  
Tao Zhang ◽  
Tilei Gao ◽  
Di Zhang ◽  
Di Yang

Author(s):  
Xueling Zhang ◽  
Xiaoyin Wang ◽  
Rocky Slavin ◽  
Travis Breaux ◽  
Jianwei Niu
Keyword(s):  

2020 ◽  
Vol 111 (3) ◽  
pp. 2045-2063
Author(s):  
Li Miao ◽  
Lina Wang ◽  
Shuai Li ◽  
Xianwei Zhou

IEEE Access ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 8 ◽  
pp. 97243-97257
Author(s):  
Luoyang Fang ◽  
Haonan Wang ◽  
Xiang Cheng ◽  
Liuqing Yang ◽  
Shuguang Cui

Author(s):  
Pawel Popiel

Engaging normative theories of the press and research examining the evolution of privacy coverage, this study examines press coverage of mobile app privacy issues between 2013 and 2016. The research sheds light on how the press frames privacy concerns within the mobile app context. Since such coverage can define the norms circumscribing the flows of users’ personal information, this study contributes to the debate about the role of the press in alerting the public to privacy issues that carry significant public interest implications. Ultimately, mobile privacy coverage favors certain solutions over others, emphasizes privacy tradeoffs over privacy rights, and balances user powerlessness with mobile app convenience and innovation, with implications for privacy discourses in public and policy arenas.


2019 ◽  
Vol 2019 ◽  
pp. 1-10
Author(s):  
Chuan Yu ◽  
Shuhui Chen ◽  
Zhiping Cai

Phone number is a unique identity code of a mobile subscriber, which plays a more important role in the mobile social network life than another identification number IMSI. Unlike the IMSI, a mobile device never transmits its own phone number to the network side in the radio. However, the mobile network may send a user’s phone number to another mobile terminal when this user initiating a call or SMS service. Based on the above facts, with the help of an IMSI catcher and 2G man-in-the-middle attack, this paper implemented a practicable and effective phone number catcher prototype targeting at LTE mobile phones. We caught the LTE user’s phone number within a few seconds after the device camped on our rogue station. This paper intends to verify that mobile privacy is also quite vulnerable even in LTE networks as long as the legacy GSM still exists. Moreover, we demonstrated that anyone with basic programming skills and the knowledge of GSM/LTE specifications can easily build a phone number catcher using SDR tools and commercial off-the-shelf devices. Hence, we hope the operators worldwide can completely disable the GSM mobile networks in the areas covered by 3G and 4G networks as soon as possible to reduce the possibility of attacks on higher-generation cellular networks. Several potential countermeasures are also discussed to temporarily or permanently defend the attack.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (3) ◽  
pp. 627-627
Author(s):  
Jan Hendrik Betzing ◽  
Matthias Tietz ◽  
Jan vom Brocke ◽  
Jörg Becker

The article “The impact of transparency on mobile privacy decision making”, written by Jan Hendrik Betzing, Matthias Tietz, Jan vom Brocke, Jörg Becker, was originally published electronically on the publisher’s internet portal (currently SpringerLink) on 07 February 2019 without open access.


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