Trevor Eckhart: Carrier
IQ, Quietly Tracking Your Phone
New Questions About Mobile Phone Privacy
Doug Bernard
December 5, 2011
Trevor Eckhart, by his own account, is a 25-year-old “average Joe.” A
digital developer based in Connecticut, Eckhart’s been quietly exploring
the privacy and security aspects of the Android mobile operating system.
This week, the quiet ended.
First posted on his website
“Android Security Test” a while back, Eckhart began exploring what applications developed by the firm Carrier
IQ were doing while he was on his Android phone. Carrier IQ, based in
Mountain View, California, markets a variety of mobile applications, or
apps, that monitor and track mobile phone use, and then provide that
information back to service providers and developers. Carrier IQ says
this information is limited and protected, and is only used to improve
mobile service and use. “We are counting and summarizing performance,
not recording keystrokes or providing tracking tools,” reads in part a
statement on the company website.
But Eckhart says his research suggests that’s not the case, and in
documents on his site – and visually in a 17 minute video – he lays out
the case that Carrier IQ products are doing much more than they say, all
out of sight of the average user.
Using his own HTC Evo mobile phone, Eckhart demonstrates how apps such
as “HTC IQAgent” run in near-hidden mode on his phone; even once he
finds them, he’s unable to turn them off. He then runs his phone through
its paces – turning it on and off, dialing numbers, sending SMS text
messages and browsing websites. Alarmingly, it appears that the IQAgent
app logs and transmits every keystroke he makes, all hidden from view.
Eckhart dials a number, and IQAgent duly records and transmits every
digit. He sends a text, and it notes who, how, when, and of course what
the message actually said. There’s even a complete log of every website
he visits and what he does there, even while using the security-enhanced
“https” format. Remember – this is all in addition to the actual
functions his phone is performing with the actual service provider.
Eckhart called IQAgent a “rootkit”, which in tech terms is a bit of
software that is considered critical to function, loads and runs
automatically, and is largely (or entirely) outside of the user’s
control. That, apparently, was fighting words for the Carrier IQ. They
responded swiftly, denying the claim, demanding he remove information
about the company and threatening Eckhart with legal action. Late last
week, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, or EFF, stepped in to provide
Eckhart assistance and legal help, and Carrier IQ pulled back.
The kerfuffle only drew more attention to Eckhart’s work, and to the
largely un-noticed Carrier IQ firm.
Reporters started digging, and it quickly became clear how little was
known about the company, its products and who uses them. How many apps
are there, what are its clients, and just who are they transmitting all
those keystrokes to?
Here’s what’s known. It’s estimated that Carrier IQ’s tracking apps run
on 150 million hand-held devices, an astonishingly large number. This
week AT&T, Apple, Sprint and T-Mobile all admitted to using Carrier IQ
software on at least some of its devices. Sprint and AT&T also
acknowledged they receive some transmitted data, but both firms insisted
it was all anonymous, and for network diagnostics only.
For its part, Carrier IQ continues to state that its products don’t
actually “record” all those keystrokes, meaning that its software may
detect a large amount of keystrokes (or all of them) but that most of
that information is not communicated back to the service providers.
CNNMoney spoke with security analyst Dan Rosenberg, who said “People
need to recognize that there’s a big difference between recording events
like keystrokes … and actually collecting, storing, and
transmitting this data to carriers, which doesn’t happen.”
But that’s cold comfort for digital privacy proponents, who note the
firm originally denied even detecting all those keystrokes – a claim it
has gingerly inched back from since Eckhart posted his video. And the
timing for Carrier IQ could hardly be worse, coming just a week after a
flurry of reports – and Congressional denunciations – of mobile apps
that track a shopper’s movements through stores and shopping centers.
(The British firm, Path Intelligence, has backed off those plans, for
now.)
For the moment, with a little help from the EFF, Trevor Eckhart says
he’ll do what he can to continue his work. Only now, it’s likely he
won’t be the only one.