Android So Much Of An iPhone Wannabe That It, Too, Has A Kill Switch

from the remote-disabling dept

There was plenty of attention a few months back when it was revealed (first by a hacker, then confirmed by Apple) that the iPhone contained a kill switch that could remotely disable any application. Nancy Gohring, over at IDG, has gone through the terms of service for the first Google Android-based phone and noted that it appears to have a remote kill switch as well, though at least it’s upfront about it. You can understand why mobile operators might want this (for example, to stop a bandwidth hogging app), but it’s still rather troubling that an app that you thought you had placed on your own device might be remotely deleted one day. If we’ve been able to deal with rogue and runaway apps on PCs for all these years, you would think that mobile operators would be able to deal with it as well.

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Comments on “Android So Much Of An iPhone Wannabe That It, Too, Has A Kill Switch”

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timothy (user link) says:

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timothy (user link) says:

[Subject] StateDemocracy.org Equips You for the 2008 Elections

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Anonymous Coward says:

Android Kill Switch != iPhone Kill Switch

Key differences:
* You can install apps easily without using the Google Store Repository
* The Kill Switch only works on Apps installed from the Google Store Repository
* The Kill Switch is not meant to be used to censor programs, just to stop malicious ones that may get uploaded to the Google Store Repository

Of course, only time can tell for sure. But Google isn’t hiding it and from what I can tell those are the key differences. Apple’s kill switch is used to prevent competition on their platform. Google’s is there for liability reasons.

Eric (user link) says:

Re: Android Kill Switch != iPhone Kill Switch

I’m not going to purchase and use a phone that has this “kill switch”. I will install whatever I damn well please on my phone and use it in whatever way I choose and particularly apps that I pay for. I’m not going to have an app auto-delete from my phone remotely. No thanks. This is still America damn it. Any vendor who has such a “kill switch” on my phone will not get my business.

TX CHL Instructor (profile) says:

An interview with a mobile telco

I recently interviewed with a mobile telco for a programming job (didn’t get the job, which may have turned out to be the best possible outcome), and in the discussion, the manager showed me some real-time data from his network. In the data stream that flowed by, he spotted something that caused him to pause the display.

“A hacker trying to break into the network…” He then punched a few keys, and suspended the account. He then explained that the system normally detects that sort of intrusion attempt and shuts it down automatically, but this one apparently learned what the pinging threshold was, and was staying just under it. The would-be hacker appeared to be trying to access a feature for which he had not paid. He would have been caught in a few minutes anyway, but the manager just happened to see it first.

Now, supposed we had a few tens of thousands of zombied smartphones out there…

I think I can see where a remote killswitch might be something a cell network would want. The alternative would be to suspend all of those accounts, and render the phones useless except for 911 calls. Much less impact on the users, much less burden on customer service, much better protection of the network.

http://www.chl-tx.com Nothing deters violent crime as effectively as the possibility that your intended victim might shoot you. Nothing.

Bradley says:

Another difference

I’d read here on Engadget that Google is even going so far as to make “reasonable efforts to recover the purchase price of the product … from the original developer on your behalf” for any app they actually might use the killswitch on. That seems pretty fair to me, and comparing Google vs Apple’s track records, I’d be much less concerned with Google killing off things they don’t like or consider competition.

d_mat says:

Choice

In the end it still comes down to choice. You either want a closed system that is secure (but based on open-source, i.e. best of both worlds… in a way) or a totally open system for flexibility. Its a choice that has always existed between Mac and Windows OSes.
The kill switch is a new element in this system of choice (allbeit with some extra caveats) and you have to decide for yourself. Its a security thing, and I have to say, I think, in this case, I would go for security. I have a laptop for flexibility.
The only issue to me is that Apple didn’t say it upfront. I hope its not a bad sign about the future at Apple.

Anonymous Coward says:

Getting around the kill switch

One thing people seem to be assuming is that the kill switch would actually take out a malicious application. My guess is that people who make malicious applications will find an easy way to prevent their applications from being disabled. This will leave only “honest” applications subject to the kill switch.

Also, what is a malicious application? Will the US IP Czar decide that the lastest JibJab application is unfair to the President and is therefore is malicious and order Google to kill it?

This is kind of like DRM. It is something that sounds great when the proposal is pitched in the board of directors meeting. In practice, it doesn’t work out as planned.

JT says:

Re: Getting around the kill switch

The premise of the killswitch is to disable the app probably using undocumented/unreleased code. While I’m no expert, I would assume that it would terminate the application on another layer that the application would have no ability to alter.

DRM is in place for a million different configurations, this is a proprietary platform. If you want a comparison, it would be closer to protection that console systems use rather than DRM.

Brian says:

I am always amused to see babble about Android “copying” iphone features that have existed for quite a while before the first iphone ever shipped.

Fun fact: on-device stores/marketplaces/whathaveyou existed long before apple “invented” them. Sadly, like the apple marketplace, they’ve mostly been restrictive “walled garden” environments controlled by entities with motives nowhere in line with actual users of the devices.

Jesse says:

kill switch

The kill switch is intended to stop an application that is hogging up the bandwidth. Take Facebooks mobwars for example.. you can download a bot and have that program running incessantly for days and days. The kill switch just stops the program… It doesnt keep you from keeping the program on your phone. enough with the conspiracy theory and big brother crap already

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