Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App ...

Electronic data

View graph of relations

A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic. / Lyko, Tomasz; Elkhatib, Yehia.
2017. Paper presented at Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems, Belgrade, Serbia.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Lyko, T & Elkhatib, Y 2017, 'A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic', Paper presented at Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems, Belgrade, Serbia, 23/04/17 - 26/04/17.

APA

Lyko, T., & Elkhatib, Y. (2017). A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic. Paper presented at Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems, Belgrade, Serbia.

Vancouver

Lyko T, Elkhatib Y. A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic. 2017. Paper presented at Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems, Belgrade, Serbia.

Author

Lyko, Tomasz ; Elkhatib, Yehia. / A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic. Paper presented at Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems, Belgrade, Serbia.

Bibtex

@conference{80c1b2a347534f49b0ebc490d8e8afd8,
title = "A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic",
abstract = "The number of smart devices keeps on growing every year, and with that the potential market for mobile apps. As of May 2016, Google Play hosted 2.6 million apps and had an accumulative total of 65 billion app downloads. Any developer can publish apps through Play, and it is quite prevalent to granting apps permission use the phone's network network interfaces at will and under very limited supervision (beyond overall traffic volume and bitwise access to an interface). This raises the following questions: can certain apps be harmful to users? Should we trust mobile developers to 'do no evil' in terms of the volume and type of traffic their apps generate? We are motivated to identify whether there is a need for more scrutiny on the connections apps make, especially when not in use.",
author = "Tomasz Lyko and Yehia Elkhatib",
note = "Not included in formal proceedings; Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems : EuroSys 2017 ; Conference date: 23-04-2017 Through 26-04-2017",
year = "2017",
month = apr,
day = "24",
language = "English",
url = "http://eurosys2017.org/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - A Preliminary Look into Unsolicited Mobile App Traffic

AU - Lyko, Tomasz

AU - Elkhatib, Yehia

N1 - Conference code: 12th

PY - 2017/4/24

Y1 - 2017/4/24

N2 - The number of smart devices keeps on growing every year, and with that the potential market for mobile apps. As of May 2016, Google Play hosted 2.6 million apps and had an accumulative total of 65 billion app downloads. Any developer can publish apps through Play, and it is quite prevalent to granting apps permission use the phone's network network interfaces at will and under very limited supervision (beyond overall traffic volume and bitwise access to an interface). This raises the following questions: can certain apps be harmful to users? Should we trust mobile developers to 'do no evil' in terms of the volume and type of traffic their apps generate? We are motivated to identify whether there is a need for more scrutiny on the connections apps make, especially when not in use.

AB - The number of smart devices keeps on growing every year, and with that the potential market for mobile apps. As of May 2016, Google Play hosted 2.6 million apps and had an accumulative total of 65 billion app downloads. Any developer can publish apps through Play, and it is quite prevalent to granting apps permission use the phone's network network interfaces at will and under very limited supervision (beyond overall traffic volume and bitwise access to an interface). This raises the following questions: can certain apps be harmful to users? Should we trust mobile developers to 'do no evil' in terms of the volume and type of traffic their apps generate? We are motivated to identify whether there is a need for more scrutiny on the connections apps make, especially when not in use.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - Twelfth European Conference on Computer Systems

Y2 - 23 April 2017 through 26 April 2017

ER -