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11 Apps You Should Delete from Your Phone Right Now

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The smartphone, for all its life-changing magic, sucks. It sucks up your time, it sucks up your battery, and it sucks up your data. So we’ve compiled a list of the apps you should wipe from your phone, stat: those that track you, harm your mental health, and pretend to care about your privacy, but don’t practice what they preach.

Keep in mind that you should always do your research and try to familiarize yourself with the app developer company before downloading—that will be a good indicator of whether or not the app is trustworthy. Read the user comments, do a quick Google search of the app name to see if there are any news stories about it, and compare it to other applications with a similar function. If the app is a pedometer, but is requesting way more data than other pedometer-related apps, you might have a data leech on your hands.

Use common sense, weed out the bad apps, delete’em now, and never look back.

1) GasBuddy

Unfortunately, heaps of useful and practical apps are some of the most serious threats to your own data security. That’s because they depend on data, period.

Take GasBuddy, for example. It’s meant to help you save precious cash at the pump by letting you compare prices at gas stations nearby—wherever you are—but that also means it’s gathering loads and loads of location data to make those calls.

The company recently told its users about a privacy policy change through an email and a push notification, the company’s general counsel told Popular Mechanics.

“If you access the Service through a mobile device, and if your preferences are set to permit collection of the information, we will also automatically collect information about your driving habits, including, but not limited to, driving distance, speed, acceleration and braking habits,” the privacy policy reads, in part.

That portion of the privacy policy relates to a feature called “Drive,” which collects information to tell you about your driving habits. GasBuddy said it’s an opt-in service.

Still, if you want to use the app at all, you’ve gotta fork over at least some of that precious data. That’s true of any services that use geolocation.

Sure, just the gas station location data could be used to triage locations like where you work, live, and go out, but explicitly collecting data on your whereabouts in the background all the time feels like a full-on manifestation of Big Brother.

2) TikTok

In early July, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo said that the U.S. is considering a ban on TikTok—the wildly popular social media app where teens create and share short comedy clips, lip-sync videos, and dances.

The vitriol toward TikTok—which Beijing-based ByteDance owns and operates—partially stems from accounts that the platform acutely invades the privacy of its users, potentially passing on data to the authoritarian Chinese government.

However, there hasn’t been proof of any state-sponsored espionage.

The reason we have TikTok on this list? The app does collect a ton of user data. And while it may not be malicious, users should at least be wary, and ask themselves if a social media app needs to have access to information like your hardware IDs, memory usage, the apps installed on your phone, your IP address, or your most recently used WiFi access points.

3) Apps That Steal Your Facebook Login Credentials

Parisian cybersecurity firm Evina has identified 25 apps that use malware to steal your Facebook login credentials. Strangely, a lot of them appear to be generic wallpaper or flashlight related apps.

“This malware could effectively ruin your online and offline life by making off with the credentials of one of your most valued pieces of digital real estate,” the company said in a post on its website.

Evina has worked with Google to have the apps removed from the Play market, but if you have any of these installed on your device, be sure to nix them ASA

-Super Wallpapers Flashlight

-Padenatef

-Wallpaper Level

-Contour Level Wallpaper

-iPlayer & iWallpaper

-Video Maker

-Color Wallpapers

-Pedometer

-Powerful Flashlight

-Super Bright Flashlight

-Super Flashlight

-Solitaire Game

-Accurate Scanning of QR Code

-Classic Card Game

-Junk File Cleaning

-Synthetic Z

-File Manager

-Composite Z

-Screenshot Caputre

-Daily Horoscope Wallpapers

-Wuxia Reader

-Plus Weather

Anime Live Wallpaper

-iHealth Step Counter

-Com.tqyapp.fiction

4) Angry Birds

Depressing, but true: Angry Birds isn’t your friend, even after all of these years.

Released by Finnish developer Rovio Entertainment back in 2009, the bird-launching game became an overnight success. What went wrong? Well, it all begins with Edward Snowden.

Early on, the infamous whistleblower claimed the hit mobile game was siphoning loads of data from users, but no one really took him seriously until it became national news that the U.S. National Security Agency and its British counterpart, the Government Communications Headquarters, actually were collecting and transmitting personal data about the game’s users.

An ad platform hidden in some of the game’s code let the company target advertisements to its users and, in an unfortunate twist of fate, that ad data was completely visible. That meant sensitive data like phone numbers, call logs, location, political information and even information about users’ sexual orientation were public and available to those government agencies and beyond.

The developers say it’s safe to use the app now, but maybe you should just take a break from shooting pigs and flinging birds for a bit.

5) IPVanish VPN

VPNs, or virtual private networks, rose in popularity over the last 10 years, but they’ve been around since 1996. Their purpose is to mask your internet activity and provide online privacy and anonymity by creating a private internet network from a public connection. VPNs mask your internet protocol (IP) location, making it virtually impossible to trace you. You can even make it look like you’re browsing from Slovakia when you’re actually in the U.S.

Ironically, a majority of VPN apps aren’t safe, including one of the most popular providers, IPVanish VPN. YouTubers and other influencers heavily push the paid service because it has a lucrative affiliate program. However, in 2018, IPVanish was found to be logging customers’ data and providing it to U.S. authorities, according to a YouTube review by Lee TV, a tech review vlog.

Weird, right? Since it was caught, IPVanish quit that practice, but it caused a myriad of trust issues for users, leading many to cancel their subscription and delete the app.

That relationship with the government, while kaput, begs the question: Who else could IPVanish be sharing data with, while not adequately notifying customers?

6) Facebook

Nobody should be surprised by this one, but if you haven’t already, you should seriously consider deleting Facebook. Just like Instagram and Twitter, its users waste far too much time on the app, which often results in anxiety or depression, studies have found.

But the cybersecurity issues are of equal cause for concern. Last year’s Cambridge Analytica scandal led to 87 million compromised profiles, whose contents were breached in a massive data leak that resulted in a U.S. Federal Trade Commission probe.

Not only does Facebook continue to have data breaches almost constantly (including one this month, already), but the company itself is also harvesting your data to build a profile of you for advertisers. Facebook’s app can take photos and video, record audio, add and delete contacts, read your texts and your calendar, and more.

The app is also constantly running in the background and sending you annoying push notifications that drain your battery and data limits (if you don’t have an unlimited data plan through your cell phone provider).

If you just can’t quit, you can add a shortcut to the Facebook site to your phone’s home screen on Android or bookmark under your favorites on iPhone to keep the data harvesting to a minimum. Just remember to close out the tab or screen when you’re done.

7) Any and All of These Android Apps Infested with a New Form of Malware

Have you heard of the “Joker Malware” yet? Just this month, it turned out that two dozen Android apps have been infected with the malware, which is designed to sign you up for subscription services without your permission. That could cost you hundreds or thousands of dollars if you don’t routinely check your bank and credit card statements.

“So far, we have detected it in 24 apps with over 472,000 installs in total,” cybersecurity researcher Aleksejs Kuprins at CSIS Security Group, wrote in a Medium blog.

Kuprins says the virus “steals the victim’s SMS messages [and] the contact list and device info.”

Some of the code’s notes, he found, were written in Chinese, so that could indicate where the threat originated.

Once the malware was identified, Google moved the impacted apps from its store, but if you’ve already purchased or downloaded one of the following apps, not only should you uninstall them immediately, but you should also check your bank and credit card statements to identify any fraud.

Here is a complete list of the known affected apps:

-Advocate Wallpaper

-Age Face

-Altar Message

-Antivirus Security — Security ScanBeach

-CameraBoard picture editing

-Certain Wallpaper

-Climate SMS

-Collate Face Scanner

-Cute Camera

-Dazzle Wallpaper

-Declare Message

-Display Camera

-Great VPN

-Humour Camera

-Ignite Clean

-Leaf Face Scanner

-Mini Camera

-Print Plan Scan

-Rapid Face Scanner

-Reward Clean

-Ruddy SMS

-Soby Camera

-Spark Wallpaper

8) Apps That Claim To Increase RAM

Phones and computers rely on random access memory, or RAM, to store data that is needed right now or in the near future. Think about it like fast memory—without it, everything would be slower.

But to actually increase the RAM space in a device, you’ll have to buy external drives that are often quite pricey.

Apps that promise to increase your RAM space, for free, including RAM Booster (Memory Cleaner) and 4 GB RAM Memory Booster – AppLock are really just cleaning your cache to temporarily increase storage. That’s something that your phone already has the capacity to do on its own, so these apps seem to be nothing more than an excuse to serve you adds and collect your data. Be wary

9) CamScanner

Unless you work from home, you probably don’t have a fax machine or printer with a built-in scanner readily available. So when your boss or landlord asks you to sign a document, scan it, and send it back, that’s where apps like CamScanner come in.

The app lets you take a photo of a document and instantly turn it into a PDF. Cool, right? Of course—until the malware it’s been infected with crawls into your phone.

In June, researchers at the Russian cybersecurity company Kaspersky found malware in several different versions of the CamScanner app

10) YouVersion Bible

It’s an incredibly simple app with the full text of the Bible. What could possibly go wrong?

The most popular Bible app, YouVersion, is installed on about 300 million phones as of this year and, apparently, it’s the app’s divine right to collect all your data.

YouVersion can connect and disconnect to WiFi whenever it wants, modify the content stored on your phone, track your location, and read all of your contacts. And it’s probably not to let a higher power know what you’re doing. It’s most likely to serve you ads.

A rep from YouVersion told ExpressVPN that you have nothing to worry about. Apparently, the app’s permissions are meant to ensure the “best possible experience for our users” and that the developer, a nonprofit, “will not sell users’data or personally identifiable information.

11) Randonautica

Look, we love random adventures as much as the next person, but not when those travels take you to a literal suitcase with corpses inside—which is exactly what one group of teens on TikTok discovered after using Randonautica, a choose-your-own-adventure style app.

To use the app, you simply share your location, set an intention, and follow the on-screen instructions to some rendezvous point. It’s basically a random number generator, but users have certainly had some unsettling experiences (although some of them could be explained away through confirmation bias).

With this app, we’re not as concerned about privacy or surveillance, so it’s not necessarily dangerous to have it on your phone. The danger comes into play when you’re visiting absolutely random spots, so please use caution: don’t go out alone at night and don’t trespass on private property.

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