Presidential campaign apps expose personal data, report says
Over half of presidential campaign-related smartphone apps on Android devices are exposing users’ sensitive data, according to new research.
Presidential campaigns — and the groups that support them — are increasingly using smartphone apps to try to attract voters. Yet those behind these apps have not taken proper steps, in many cases, to secure the vast troves of data they are collecting, digital security firm Symantec said Monday.
{mosads}Republican candidates John Kasich and Ted Cruz were singled out for having official campaign apps that may leave data exposed.
Symantec’s research did not find problems with the campaign apps for GOP front-runner Donald Trump or the apps run by campaigns for the two Democratic candidates, Hillary Clinton and Bernie Sanders.
The biggest problem lies with the expanding number of unaffiliated presidential primary apps.
“Out of more than 1,200 presidential-primary-related Android apps we looked at, more than 50 percent exposed sensitive data,” Symantec said in blog post.
Among the most popular primary election apps — those with over 1 million downloads — nearly 25 percent failed to protect personal information, the post said.
The exposed information can include names, email addresses, phone numbers, GPS coordinates, the phone’s model and a list of the apps installed on the device.
Trump has a lot to do with the explosion of these types of apps. Three-quarters of them are categorized under his name. Sanders is second, with 13 percent.
Among the official campaign apps with issues, Symantec said Kasich’s app was potentially letting hackers access user location details and that Cruz’s app had a low risk of revealing details about the device it is installed on.
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