Where did that data go? Thomas Reed reads Mac App Store apps are stealing user data: Some of this data is actually being sent to Chinese servers, which may not be subject to the same stringent requirements around storage and protection of personally identifiable information like organizations based in the US or EU. 12 most popular free app in the US Mac App Store. The certificate issued for the domain is registered as Trend Micro, Inc. All of this information is collected upon launching the app, which then creates a zip file and uploads it to the developer’s servers. collect … the user’s browser history from Safari, Google Chrome and Firefox … separate files specifically dedicated to storing the user’s recent Google searches information about other apps installed on the system … including information about where they were downloaded from, whether they are 64-bit compatible and their code signature. apps distributed by … Trend Micro, Inc., which include Dr. What’s the craic? Guilherme Rambo can’t quite believe his eyes: Mac App Store apps caught stealing and uploading browser history: When you give an app access to your home directory on macOS, even if it’s an app from the Mac App Store, you should think twice. Not to mention: Top 5 DJ Mistakes … Anti-malware apps were … malware? Your humble blogwatcher curated these bloggy bits for your entertainment.
But how on earth could it happen? In this week’s Security Blogwatch, we’re bang on Trend.
And the security company’s public statements covered the full gamut of aggressive denials, sorry-not-sorry “apologies,” and a full-on mea culpa.
It’s alleged that several of its consumer macOS apps have been collecting personal data without permission-or at least, without informed consent. Trend Micro is facing fierce criticism this week.