Personal information classification on aggregated android application's permissions

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Abstract

Android is offering millions of apps on Google Play-store by the application publishers. However, those publishers do have a parent organization and share information with them. Through the 'Android permission system', a user permits an app to access sensitive personal data. Large-scale personal data integration can reveal user identity, enabling new insights and earn revenue for the organizations. Similarly, aggregation of Android app permissions by the app owning parent organizations can also cause privacy leakage by revealing the user profile. This work classifies risky personal data by proposing a threat model on the large-scale app permission aggregation by the app publishers and associated owners. A Google-play application programming interface (API) assisted web app is developed that visualizes all the permissions an app owner can collectively gather through multiple apps released via several publishers. The work empirically validates the performance of the risk model with two case studies. The top two Korean app owners, seven publishers, 108 apps and 720 sets of permissions are studied. With reasonable accuracy, the study finds the contact number, biometric ID, address, social graph, human behavior, email, location and unique ID as frequently exposed data. Finally, the work concludes that the real-time tracking of aggregated permissions can limit the odds of user profiling.

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APA

Onik, M. M. H., Kim, C. S., Lee, N. Y., & Yang, J. (2019). Personal information classification on aggregated android application’s permissions. Applied Sciences (Switzerland), 9(19). https://doi.org/10.3390/app9193997

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