Firestalked - The Amazon Fire Tablet Security CoverUp

Episode 2: Don't Play With Fire

33 min · 6 de oct de 2025
portada del episodio Episode 2: Don't Play With Fire

Descripción

Amazon FireOS is a fork of stock Android. And what must be remembered it is it has to support a lot of software repo's and a lot of older libraries. However Amazon not licencing Android from Google and not partaking in the Play ecosystem is one matter. Amazon have only got to support a limited range of graphics chipsets and a limited range of hardware mainboards so it's NOT a lot of work. There are mainstream open source Linux distributions supporting PPC Intel ARM who have to do a lot more work than Amazon. Amazon FireOS tablets have always been two to three distributions behind Google. Have always failed to have security standards aligned with Google. No file encryption or SD card encryption. No Knox equivalent etc. So you'd expect if you have older stable dev trees that you would take security and privacy seriously. I proved categorically that Amazon did no such thing

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5 episodios

episode Episode 5: It's a Dumpster Fire artwork

Episode 5: It's a Dumpster Fire

It's now six or seven weeks since we went pubic following Steven J Vaughn Nicholls, the world famous trusted and lauded US technology editor in his story about my having been hacked and stalked using Amazon Fire devices. Now nearly 100k people have downloaded and listened to Episodes 1-4 we have further disclosure that has been made available by folk within Amazon and also software engineers in the community regarding Amazon having been aware of issues with SLO / SSO and security issues with FireOS 5.x - 7.x during the period 2017 to 9th June 2023 when it was finally patched. And a county police force in the UK, Wiltshire Police now look extremely lax, naive, inexperienced and they should be very very embarrassed. I am meeting with them and their Digital Forensic Team (finally) in the next few weeks. They should be humble embarrassed and ashamed of what a shower of shit they are. I look foward to the Chief Constable of Wiltshire releasing a public facing apology before Christmas and I look foward to and fully expect interim damages from Wiltshire Police for their failures. Episode 6 out soon.

2 de dic de 20251 h 4 min
episode Episode 4: Ethical People do exist at Amazon artwork

Episode 4: Ethical People do exist at Amazon

There are good people in the world. Ethical folk who are engineers and programmers, programme leads and operational staff. Often they are managed by those who play the angles. Who would rather the bad news never saw the light of day. But when you're an SEC listed company, fined days prior by the US Department of Justice and the FTC for a smaller breach than the one you've just had walked in the door that now affects the legacy privacy of tens of millions of devices in the field then you have an absolute responsibility to communicate to your users. In fact the DoJ ruling stated that Amazon was orded "notify users of its retention and deletion practices and controls;". Immediately two major vulnerabilities which impacted that ruling were on the desk of the Head of Security regarding retention of data and privacy and cached credentials allowing a device to become a trusted hardware token. With the fourth major bug being the fact that software flaws in Cloudview and logging meant you were unable to deregister Kids Fire devices at all from the Web UI. So what happens when someone blows the whistle when Amazon tried to cover all this up ??? Decent people do exist. Shame Amazon can't keep hold of them. Maybe they should send him a stock award and an apology.

8 de oct de 202539 min
episode Episode 2: Don't Play With Fire artwork

Episode 2: Don't Play With Fire

Amazon FireOS is a fork of stock Android. And what must be remembered it is it has to support a lot of software repo's and a lot of older libraries. However Amazon not licencing Android from Google and not partaking in the Play ecosystem is one matter. Amazon have only got to support a limited range of graphics chipsets and a limited range of hardware mainboards so it's NOT a lot of work. There are mainstream open source Linux distributions supporting PPC Intel ARM who have to do a lot more work than Amazon. Amazon FireOS tablets have always been two to three distributions behind Google. Have always failed to have security standards aligned with Google. No file encryption or SD card encryption. No Knox equivalent etc. So you'd expect if you have older stable dev trees that you would take security and privacy seriously. I proved categorically that Amazon did no such thing

6 de oct de 202533 min