Slashdot is powered by your submissions, so send in your scoop

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Android Security Software Censorship Encryption Google Government Open Source Privacy News Politics Technology Your Rights Online

Taliban App's Publication Points To Holes In Google's App Review Process (techcrunch.com) 80

An anonymous reader writes: A propaganda app developed by the Taliban was live on the Google Play store for two days before being removed, raising questions about Google's app review process, which includes a combination of human editors and algorithms. According to a Taliban spokesperson speaking with Bloomberg, the app was "part of our advanced technological efforts to make more global audience." Its creation signaled how the group was expanding its use of technology to reach a wider audience. When the app was first removed two days after it went live, the Taliban claimed it was due to "technical issues." In actuality, Google removed the app itself, as it was in violation of its policy that bans apps promoting hate speech, violence and illegal activities. The app's publication is a high-profile example of a failure in Google's app review process, and one that raises questions about how thorough its human reviewers are with the apps they test. The company announced last March that it had actually begun using algorithms along with an internal team of reviewers to analyze apps for policy violations prior to publishing. It said apps would be reviewed by this team, hands-on, before the apps go live on Google Play. Since Google relies heavily on its community of users and developers to flag apps for additional review, some apps are bound to fall through the cracks, leaving Google to reactively ban them instead of prohibit their publication in the first place. It's fair to say Google's review process isn't perfect and could use some tweaking.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Taliban App's Publication Points To Holes In Google's App Review Process

Comments Filter:
  • by Anonymous Coward on Monday April 04, 2016 @05:33PM (#51841153)

    Two days of a bad app being available doesn't seem like the end of the world to me. They caught it, removed it, all done. If that's the price for not having a walled garden I think it's worth paying.

    • It's a walled garden. It just has slightly different walls.

      • The kind with (unlocked) doors in them.

        • by fyngyrz ( 762201 )

          Unlocked... that word doesn't mean what you think it means.

          When a door cannot be passed because it is prevented from opening, and those who manage the door refuse to open it... that door is not unlocked.

          Google's app store definitely has walls, and the doors definitely have locks, and it definitely has rules about who, and what, Google will open those doors for.

          You can peruse the Google App Store Developer Policy Center [google.com] to learn about the walls and locks.

          I'm not saying Apple's good. I'm just saying Google's

      • It's a walled garden. It just has slightly different walls.

        Not really. I have submitted several apps, and they were available nearly instantly. As far as I can tell, there is no app review process. They just remove apps in response to complaints, not proactively.

    • Two days of a bad app being available doesn't seem like the end of the world to me. They caught it, removed it, all done. If that's the price for not having a walled garden I think it's worth paying.

      If it were two days of a banking trojan that during that time stole your credentials...would you feel the same?

    • I'll bet the app was downloaded by 95% of the big fish. Small fish would have trickled in after the cut off date.

      But maybe - just maybe - the release was planned and monitored by the dark agents. Then cut off so people wouldn't ask questions allowing Google to save face ("oh we caught it just in time").

      Conspiracy? It's a conspiracy man!! just throwing it out there. :-)

    • Two days of a bad app being available doesn't seem like the end of the world to me. They caught it, removed it, all done. If that's the price for not having a walled garden I think it's worth paying.

      And you would be screaming bloody murder if this had happened on the iOS App Store.

    • Android, the choice of the open source aficionados and the Taliban

      (politics makes for strange bedfellows)

  • Why ban it? (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Why not instead use it and feed them tons and tons of bogus data?

    Let them waste their time responding to spam instead of hurting people.

    • Why not instead use it and feed them tons and tons of bogus data?

      How about posting directions for making bombs that will blow up in their faces . . . ?

      "The final step in producing Nitroglycerin is to put it into a container and shake it vigorously." . . . or . . .

      "To become the Islamic Stomach Bomber, all you need to do is to produce Nitrogen Triiodide (NI3). This is done by combining ammonia with iodine, and is best done in your own stomach. Fill your mouth with iodine, and wash it down with ammonia. Then do the hokey-pokey. Allah and your virgins will be with yo

      • Well, The Taliban already have expert bomb makers and likely an existing distribution system for confirmed members. Doing something like that is most likely just going to get some kid hurt when he gets bored with sticking firecrackers in a frog's butt.

        I think a lot of us used to blow things up as a kid. We aren't terrorist or anything. But I can see some bored kids continuing the tradition despite the chance of being labeled a terrorist and misinformation will get them hurt or dead.

        • Well, The Taliban already have expert bomb makers and likely an existing distribution system for confirmed members.

          Actually, one of my spook friends told me that those Islamic terrorist couriers use some rather simple and ingenious methods to smuggle messages. Every good Muslim carries around a copy of the Quran with them. The average Quran has about 700 pages. No custom official will take the time to read all of the pages that a Muslim air passenger carries with them. So they replace one page of the real Quran with a page with encoded instructions. This is done by the publisher of the Quran, so a simple flip throu

          • Viola! You can carry messages, and transfer them to someone else later

            So airport security should look out for muslim viola players?

            • Sounds about as sound as a billion dollar randomizer to choose right or left. Even U.S. history suggests this as we all now know that gangsters in the 20s and 30s used to hide their Tommy Gun in violin cases.

            • If I spot anybody carrying a cello or a double bass when I'm travelling, I'll give them a very wide berth
      • But what is he going to do with all those virgins in heaven without a dick?

  • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @05:47PM (#51841207)

    Last time I looked, the Taliban were a political faction in the war-torn country of Afghanistan. Back when they conquered Kabul - after ~20 years of continous war between local militia - they were welcome by the population as bringers of peace. Sure, their medieval opinions and the the many restrictions they imposed on individual freedom decreased their popularity in the years to follow, but their rule was not really unlike that of "US friends" like Saudi Arabia.

    The Taliban are not "Al Quaida" or "ISIS", they actually were supported for years financially and by delivering weapons from the US. I understand that later on, the US disliked them because of differences on the handling of terror suspects based in Afghanistan. But what part of this actually reasoning to remove an App or theirs? If preaching a radical interpretation of Islam is "hate speech", I suppose all Apps published by Saudi Arabia etc. are banned, too? Or if having been an US-opponent in some war is reason enough for App bans, all Japanese, Italian and German Apps are banned, too?

    • That's history. They've morphed from being a repressive regime that tolerated & protected terrorists (which I guess you think is no big deal, although personally I think that should disqualify one from Google Play) to actually being a terrorist organization.

      • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @06:15PM (#51841361)

        Whether the Taliban actually "tolerated & protected terrorists" while they were in power in Afghanistan is still a matter of dispute. Even western sources wrote that the Taliban indicated willingness to prosecute Osama & friends, but under their jurisdiction. The US insisted that they had to hand over the suspects to the US immediately, long before there was evidence presented connecting Osama to the 9/11 acts of terror. The Taliban standpoint on the terror suspects looked like a welcome pretense to quickly start a war against this "no-longer-our-bad-guys" group - which didn't even result in capturing Osama, who took shelter in yet another of those "friend"-countries ruled by religious fundamentalists.

        • The Taliban asked for evidence that Osama had anything to do with 911 before they handed him over. The United States never supplied any evidence then or since that Osama had any involvement.

    • by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @05:53PM (#51841237) Homepage Journal
      Moron. Do you know what the Taliban would do to a person like you if they had their way? They would cut your head off, literally. They consider you an infidel. It is nice to sit in your suburban house and wax romantically about politics, but the Taliban would literally cut your head off if they were allowed to.
      • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
        I sure don't sympathize with the Taliban, and your assertion might be right that if I relocated to a Taliban-ruled region without keeping my opinions to myself I would end under the sword of some deathsman. But that wouldn't be any different in Saudi Arabia. So it seems arbitrary to me why a "Taliban App" would be defined "evil" per se, while Apps from other medieval factions are "ok".
        • ... while Apps from other medieval factions are "ok".

          Could you please post a link the specific app(s) that you are complaining about? Does Saudi Arabia actually have an app that advocates beheading infidels?

          • by ffkom ( 3519199 )
            Such search the Google Play Store [google.com] to yield numerous hits of Apps that convey instructions like: "So when you meet in battle those who disbelieve, then smite the necks until when you have overcome them, then make (them) prisoners, and afterwards either set them free as a favor or let them ransom (themselves) until the war terminates” (Koran 47:4).
            • "So when you meet in battle those who disbelieve, then smite the necks until when you have overcome them, then make (them) prisoners

              That does NOT advocate executing anyone. Only killing of belligerents in battle, who are to be taken prisoner as soon as they stop resisting. That is not extreme in the least, and is about as mainstream as a policy can be.

              • now lets not bring reason into this discussion. Didn't you notice he said "Koran" and "smite the necks"?

        • Yes it would. In SA they wouldn't behead you for that. They would just kick you out. The Taliban is much much worse.
      • As your parent is likely a christian he is not an infidel ...
        Infidels are non belivers ... and plenty of religions are counted as believers in islamic view.

      • by nbauman ( 624611 )

        Moron. Do you know what the Taliban would do to a person like you if they had their way? They would cut your head off, literally. They consider you an infidel. It is nice to sit in your suburban house and wax romantically about politics, but the Taliban would literally cut your head off if they were allowed to.

        Doctors Without Borders worked in Afghanistan for 30 years, delivering health care to all in need regardless of their politics or religion. They were unarmed and were respected by everyone.

        They only ran into trouble when the US forces under Colin Powell started a program in which they delivered health care, food and other services to local people, in return for informing on the "terrorists." That made all foreign medical service providers suspect.

        I wonder where you got the idea that the Taliban would cut of

    • If the Germans were still Nazi's and were publishing cute little videos of gassing chambers then I suspect Google would be shutting them down as well.

      I think Saudi Arabia is a hot bed of disgusting thought. The question is how best to deal with this (especially if we're dependent on them for oil). As dependency drops I hope that our government(s) tolerance for an oppressive theology diminishes.

      Of course it would help if private citizens would not be so cowardly and not hesitate to denounce those bra
      • by ffkom ( 3519199 ) on Monday April 04, 2016 @06:28PM (#51841445)
        The problem I have with this news is that there is no mention of any particular content of this App that the ban is reasoned with. If Google was imposing consistent rules to ban religious fundamentalism - fine with me. Start banning the historic scriptures of basically every large religion, all of which are clearly calling for violence against non-believers of their faith. Yet, there are dozens of Apps which convey, for example, hate messages like: "[W]hen the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, In flaming fire taking vengeance of them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord . . . (2 Thessalonians 1:7-9)." or “[H]e that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him” (John 3:36).
        • A major and significant difference between the two literatures you're trying to compare is that Jesus tells his followers "Blessed are the meek, for they shall inherit the earth...If a man strikes you on one cheek turn to him the other cheek also. If a soldier from an oppressive, totalitarian regime forces you to be a pack-slave for a mile, instead be his slave for two miles...Vengeance is mine, says the Lord God almighty."

          Jesus teaches that wrath, vengeance, destruction, etc. on unbelievers is the sole p
          • I don't think that is a difference that is relevant. It is either that they believe in Jesus Christ or they take the atheist views of it being fictional. Either way, the quoted section describes someone in the future doing something that may or may not happen. The Taliban encourages people in the present to do something.

            In other words, there is a difference between saying "tom will kill someone next month" and "you should kill someone next month" for whatever reason.

        • The problem I have with this news is that there is no mention of any particular content of this App that the ban is reasoned with. If Google was imposing consistent rules to ban religious fundamentalism - fine with me. Start banning the historic scriptures of basically every large religion, all of which are clearly calling for violence against non-believers of their faith. Yet, there are dozens of Apps which convey, for example, hate messages like: "[W]hen the Lord Jesus shall be revealed from heaven with his mighty angels, In flaming fire taking vengeance of them that know not God, and that obey not the gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ: Who shall be punished with everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord . . . (2 Thessalonians 1:7-9)." or “[H]e that believeth not the Son shall not see life; but the wrath of God abideth on him” (John 3:36).

          Perhaps because the taliban has sanctions against it and the bible thumpers do not?

      • (especially if we're dependent on them for oil)

        We are not dependent on SA for oil. America is mostly self-sufficient in oil, and what we do import comes mostly from Canada and Mexico.

        As dependency drops I hope that our government(s) tolerance for an oppressive theology diminishes.

        To his credit, Obama's administration vigorously protested the recent execution of Sheikh Nimr al-Nimr [wikipedia.org]. So there is some hope that America will grow a backbone, and oppose despotism from "allies" as well as enemies.

    • by ADRA ( 37398 )

      That's a good question. Unfortunately most publications reporting on the story are think on the tooth in terms of what if any actual hate speech was being espoused by the software.

      One could 'assume' that any sort of movement espousing and promoting Sharia which is very very poor on Women and homosexuals would certainly fall into the category of hate speech. Though banning it falls into banning their own quaint ethic customs. I guess the question is if the KKK, or at the least segregation promoting apps also

    • Meanwhile, Google still allows Apps created by Israel. If Google was being even handed they would ban Apps both by the Taliban and by Israel.

  • When "Trump 2016" = Hate Speech, that label has lost all meaning.

    No, I am not voting for him, he is a douchebag. But when Precious Snowflakes can't handle a few chalk marks without running off to the Campus President, and he caves (of sorts) I weep for our country!

  • A Taliban smartphone app?? What is that? What does it do? I want it on my phone! Where can I get it now if it has been removed?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    They've outsourced the reviewing to teams located in third world countries, because they are cheap.

    Guess what religon most of them are ?

    So "Death to the Infidels" or "kill all the jews" gets a sly wink and a nod, while "Mohammud was a murderous pedophile sex offender" while true, is immediately censored.

  • The recent suicide bombing in Lahore Pakistan which killed Christian woman and children celebrating Easter in the park was done by the Taliban.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    When is a monopoly large enough for such things to become censorship?

    Or is it only censorship when Apple does it?

Life is a healthy respect for mother nature laced with greed.

Working...