Mobile streaming service Quibi is less than a month old, but it's already shoving its sticky little fingers where they don't belong.
A new report by Victory Medium researcher Zach Edwards has revealed Quibi leaked user's signup emails to multiple third-party advertisers, including Google, Snapchat, Facebook, and Twitter.
In order to create a Quibi account, new users were asked to provide an email address to which the company would send a confirmation link. However, unbeknownst to said users, clicking the link sent their email address to third-party advertisers and analytics companies in plain text.
Confirmation emails are a standard part of online signups and are often required to access a service's full functionality, so users would have had little reason to distrust the link. The app had already been downloaded 2.7 million times just over two weeks after launch.
SEE ALSO: Quibi's tech lives up to the hype. The shows? That's up to you.Quibi's leak wasn't the only one covered in Edwards' report. He also noted Wish appears to have leaked hundreds of millions of emails for over a year, while The Washington Postleaked a smaller number to a few analytics companies. However, Edwards considered Quibi's leak "one of the most egregious" due to the youth of the service, and the fact that it launched after the GDPR and CCPA were put into place.
"In 2020, no new technology organizations should be launching that leaks all new user-confirmed emails to advertising and analytics companies — yet that’s what Quibi apparently decided to do," wrote Edwards.
"It’s an extremely disrespectful decision to purposefully leak all new user emails to your advertising partners, and there’s almost no way that numerous people at Quibi were not only aware of this plan, but helped to architect this user data breach."
Further, while Wish and The Washington Postacted swiftly to rectify their leaks upon being notified, Edwards reported Quibi's leak was still active over a week after the company was notified of it on April 17.
SEE ALSO: The 9 best (and weirdest) Quibi series to catch on the service's launch dayIn a statement to Variety, Quibi contradicted Edwards' claim regarding its alleged slow response, saying it was only notified of the breach on April 28. "The moment the issue on our web page was revealed to our security and engineering team, we fixed it immediately," said a Quibi spokesperson. Mashable has reached out to Quibi for further comment and will update this article if we receive a response.
Though user emails will no longer be sent to third-parties in this manner, Quibi's Privacy Policy states it may share personal information such as emails with third-party service providers. This enables said third-parties to provide the company services such as "personalized advertising, ad measurement and verification."
Even so, it's reasonable to assume users didn't expect emails entrusted to Quibi to be summarily delivered to third parties this way.
"[M]any advertising companies have features they’ve built to sync user emails into retargeting lists and other audience advertising targeting strategies, without properly notifying users," wrote Edwards. "How many of those organizations have user emails that were given without the user fully understanding what was occurring or having an ability to delete or modify that information after it was sent?"
UPDATE: May 2, 2020, 9:50 a.m. AEST Quibi has responded to Mashable with the same statement previously provided to Variety: “Data protection is essential to Quibi and the security of user information is of the highest priority. The moment the issue on our webpage was revealed to our security and engineering team, we fixed it immediately.”
Copyright © 2023 Powered by
Quibi leaked users' emails to Google, Facebook, and Twitter-美玉无瑕网
sitemap
文章
7
浏览
7315
获赞
733
Tito's Vodka would like to remind you that it *isn't* a replacement for hand sanitizer
Tito's Vodka would like to remind the general public that you can'tdouse your hands in vodka in plac'Ugly Sweater Nails' are the merriest trend in holiday nail art
We've all seen our fair share of odd beauty trends this year, and the holiday season gives us one moNetflix is 'exploring the opportunity' to stream on Nintendo Switch
Hold your horses, you Netflix-loving Nintendo Switch players: There's still hope that your favoriteFacebook bans cryptocurrency ads due to frequent fraud
Those cryptocurrency ads that promise to make you rich in a matter of days? You won't see them on FaApple's iPhone might get a periscope camera, but don't expect it very soon
The iPhone will get a periscope lens for its telephoto camera, a new report says, but don't expect iMysterious bitcoin fund donates out $1 million to Internet Archive
'Tis the season of giving and extensive web vault The Internet Archive is the latest recipient of caOminous Wall Street predictions hammer bitcoin as price decline continues
Bitcoin's price is in the gutter -- well, if you compare with that $19,940 peak about a month ago. AMatt Lauer had a bag of sex toys in his office, Meredith Vieira called him on it
Now that he's been fired by NBC News amid multiple allegations of sexual harassment, Matt Lauer's paThe 7 best YouTube cooking channels to up your culinary game
Internet of Yumdigs into all the things that make us drool while we're checking our feeds.There are'Ugly Sweater Nails' are the merriest trend in holiday nail art
We've all seen our fair share of odd beauty trends this year, and the holiday season gives us one moMy crush on Kylo Ren in 'Star Wars: The Last Jedi' has me rooting for the dark side
This story is literally riddled with Star Wars: The Last Jedi spoilers. Don't say I didn't warn you,Azzedine Alaïa, known for pioneering designs and for 'Clueless,' dies at 82
"This is an Alaïa!"The image of Cher refusing to lay on the ground when getting robbed at gunpoAOC fact checks Kimberly Guilfoyle's immigrant status
Today in "things I never thought I'd have to remind Americans ahead of the 2020 presidential electioDomino's is launching a baby registry, just like you always asked for
Congratulations, it's a big cheesy pizza pie! Domino's is launching their very own baby registry. ThIt looks like audiobooks are finally coming to the Google Play store
A glimmer of a shadow of a possibility that Google Play will soon be offering audiobooks has the bib