Comment by Arnt
12 hours ago
I think they care now because of pressure from the governments of the countries involved.
And perhaps because ten and twenty years ago, the sums stolen were small. Now they're in the billions.
12 hours ago
I think they care now because of pressure from the governments of the countries involved.
And perhaps because ten and twenty years ago, the sums stolen were small. Now they're in the billions.
How do you explain that all the scammers I've entertained used apps that are already on the store?
I think there's a misunderstanding here.
The attack in question doesn't use apps on the store, or even any attempt to get them on the store. There are also other attacks, but the one that prompted this change uses social engineering to get people to tap the build number seven times, sideload something and get a keylogger that then picked up their banking details and used them. Several governments raised the issue, Google acted. (The actions are to slow down the tap-seven-times process, so it becomes harder for the scammers to keep their victims fooled until the keylogger is installed, and also to tweak the timings, so the scammers can't outrun the app-banning process.)
If you haven't had your bank account drained, the scammers you met were different ones. (And I'm sorry that you've been scammed.)
But it is suspicious they want to defend vs attacks that don't happen while doing absolutely nothing to stop the attacks that do happen. Seems like security isn't a goal here?
(I didn't get scammed, I sometimes am curious on what the scam is so i lead them on a bit)
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