US lawmaker calls for Apple and Google to provide info on fake crypto apps
"Industry shouldn’t be allowed to write the rules that they want to play by,” said Senator Sherrod Brown in calling for U.S. lawmakers and regulators to address crypto scams. Senator Sherrod Brown, chair of the Senate Banking Committee, has penned letters to the CEOs of Google’s parent company Alphabet and Apple calling for the tech firms to provide information on the ways they prevent certain apps from promoting crypto scams.According to the letters published on Thursday, Brown asked Apple CEO Tim Cook and Alphabet CEO Sundar Pichai for the steps the tech giants were taking in the....
Related News
A U.S. lawmaker has demanded answers from Apple CEO Tim Cook and Google CEO Sundar Pichai about their measures against fake cryptocurrency apps appearing in the Apple App Store and the Google Play store. “Millions of Americans use mobile apps to invest in unregulated digital assets,” said Senator Sherrod Brown. “Reports have emerged of fake crypto apps that have scammed hundreds of investors.”
U.S. Senator Questions Chief Executives of Apple and Google on Fake Crypto Apps
Senator Sherrod Brown (D-OH), chairman of the Senate Committee on Banking,....
Fake bitcoin wallet apps have emerged in the Apple iTunes App Store, potentially putting bitcoin accounts at risk and reinforcing the need for people to make sure they are downloading apps from official wallet websites, according to Kyt Dotson, a senior editor at Silicon Angle. A representative of Breadwallet, a bitcoin app available in App Store and Google Play, has posted a notice on Reddit listing a number of fake bitcoin wallet apps in the iTunes App store, calling into question Apple’s vetting process. The fake apps have names similar to the official mobile wallet apps, but they can....
It was just yesterday we posted about Blockchain.info and their now 1.9 million MyWallet users (embarrassingly enough my original headline read '1.9 users' leading to a bit of confusion). At the end of that article, I mentioned that the Blockchain.info app had made a surprise and unintentional appearance on the App Store, before quickly being pulled (for those that did download it, they received the old version of the app). Today, Blockchain.info has announced that their app is officially now back on the App Store. The previous version of the application was removed by Apple earlier this....
According to an Apple Insider report published on August 9, a disturbing trend has emerged on Apple’s App Store as a series of malicious copycats of well-known Bitcoin wallet apps became available to download. Some of the fake wallets looked quite similar to the real thing but were specifically tweaked to steal bitcoins from unsuspecting users. As a result some $20,000 reportedly ended up in the pockets of scam artists before Apple was able to filter and remove the apps from its store. The relative “success” of the fake apps and the ease at which they were manufactured and distributed, for....
Wallets of various descriptions have come into vogue of late. Some of these wallets are run by large IT companies like Apple and Google, whilst others are run by financial institutions such as the banks. Then there are the likes of Paypal who also have a stake in the whole wallet business. These wallets exist in different forms and shapes and while some are only payment apps, others feature contactless payment technology which allow people to pay for things at shops. The underlying technologies for these wallets range from QR, NFC, Wi-Fi, Bluetooth etc. Surge in payment apps. According to....