Android, according to Tom Warren
at least according to Tom Warren
Well, there you go, guys. We got all the confirmation we needed: a Tom Warren tweet
Tom Warren, who works for the tech site The Verge (you may have heard of it) went on a hate parade on Twitter today, calling Android a âjunk OSâ because, some years ago, Facebook collected the call logs and SMSes of people who opted into giving Facebook that information.
Shocker, right?
Warren has obviously been harboring some resentment towards Android since this is not the first time heâs called Android a âjunk OSâ for normally expected behaviour. Maybe itâs because it killed his precious Windows Phone OS? Who knows.
The Deal
Hereâs the deal: before Android Marshmallow (6.0), Android required you to opt into all the permissions an app needed upfront. So if an app needed access to your camera, microphone, call log and messages, you had to grant it at installation time, otherwise you couldnât install the app.
Some people thought that this was a bad idea (while some people still think itâs a better idea than getting a pop-up for every permission you need to grant). Which approach is better is a matter of personal opinion but thatâs how it was.
In this case, Facebook asked for access to the call log and SMS messages and users had to accept these permissions to install the app. So they did and Facebook collected that info.
While I donât consider Facebook a benign entity (I have an account that I donât use a lot), Iâm also not a tin-foil conspiracy theorist. In any case, I personally donât mind if they collect that info from my phone if they have asked me for permission first.
So, whatâs Warrenâs problem?
Apparently, Tom Warren thinks itâs Androidâs fault if users didnât read the permission list upon installing the Facebook app and likens the permission dialog to an EULA agreement that âno-one readsâ. Really?
Letâs see the average Android permission dialog, pre-Marshmallow
And hereâs a link to a sample EULA page.
Hardly the same thing, is it, Mr. Warren?
My problem with Tom Warrenâs so-edgy statements on Twitter is that he tries to pretend that personal accountability does not come into play when a user decides to install an app.
The implied solution, according to him? Limit what an OS allows developers and users to do because it is considered normal behaviour for people to not read permission lists but to also want to reserve the right to bitch about it later.
Hereâs my take on it.
Even before I became an Android developer, if I suddenly learned that Facebook had access to my call log (and if I actually cared that it did, YMMV) because I hadnât read a small pop-up with permissions when installing the app, I would immediately tell myself âgeez, guy, read the permissions list next time, donât be such a twitâ instead of railing against Facebook and/or Android.
But thatâs far too logical and demands too much from todayâs âitâs not my fault, even if it isâ society, right? Hey, howâs this for an alternative? Maybe educate people to be more careful about the permissions they are granting, since itâs an integral part of privacy in todayâs tech-dominated landscape?
Have fun with your manufactured outrage, Tom Warren. It may get you some clicks today but, to me at least, it just cost you your credibility.