Close Menu

    Subscribe to our newsletter

    Get the latest Geekhub updates.

    Tuesday, January 13
    Geekhub
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • Home
    • About us
    • News
    • Technology

      Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

      12 January 2026

      LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

      12 January 2026

      Be The Ultimate Holiday Hero With Sony’s Festive Gift Guide

      8 December 2025

      Sony Launches Alpha 7 V and FE 28-70mm F3.5-5.6 OSS II – Just In Time For Christmas

      8 December 2025

      InstaPay Gini offers South Africans a way to stay ahead of inflation

      26 November 2025
    • Opinion

      AI in 2026: Power,Control, and The Risk

      7 January 2026

      Is Customer Service Becoming a Thing of the Past?

      5 January 2026

      Writing With AI – We Need To Stop Pretending

      19 November 2025

      Hollywood 2.0: Now With Extra Algorithms and Mild Identity Crisis

      6 November 2025

      ChatGPT Atlas : The Browser Wars Are Back, and Google’s in the Crosshairs

      23 October 2025
    • Movies & TV

      X-Men Join the MCU in Avengers: Doomsday 

      7 January 2026

      The Batman Part II Just Got More Interesting With Sebastian Stan

      7 January 2026

      2026’s Movie Release Schedule Is Big, Bold, and Hopeful

      5 January 2026

      Ready or Not 2: A New Level Of Chaos Ignites In Sequel

      3 December 2025

      Avatar: Fire and Ash – A Bold, Immersive Cinematic Experience

      2 December 2025
    • Hardware

      And Then ASUS Did This: The Zephyrus Duo Comes Back and Refuses to Be Sensible

      6 January 2026

      New ASUS Zephyrus G14 and G16 (2026): RTX 50-Series Gaming Power in Ultra-Thin Laptops

      6 January 2026

      The HONOR Magic V5: Flirtation With Perfection

      10 December 2025

      Smartphone of the Year 2025: OPPO Find X9 Pro

      10 December 2025

      Review: vivo V60 Lite 5G. A Big Battery and Even Bigger Promises

      17 November 2025
    • Get In Touch
    Geekhub
    Home»News»Meta and Yandex Secretly Spied on Android Browsing Activity Even in Privacy Mode
    News

    Meta and Yandex Secretly Spied on Android Browsing Activity Even in Privacy Mode

    Akhram MohamedBy Akhram Mohamed5 June 2025Updated:10 June 2025No Comments4 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Email WhatsApp
    Meta and Yandex

    Punctuation isn’t the only thing that slips by unnoticed. Sometimes, it’s your data. Sometimes, it’s your trust. And sometimes, it’s your phone, quietly handing over pieces of your life to apps you aren’t even using.

    That’s the situation researchers uncovered recently, when they found that Meta and Yandex had been quietly tracking Android users’ web activity. Not through the usual in-app data collection. Not through a cookie banner or a permissions prompt, but through background scripts running between your web browser and installed apps, completely out of sight.

    The discovery came from researchers at Radboud University and IMDEA Networks. What they found wasn’t a glitch or a bug, but a deliberate method for siphoning off browser activity, including from incognito mode and feeding it back into apps like Facebook, Instagram, and Yandex Maps.

    Imagine visiting a website while using Chrome or Firefox or even DuckDuckGo, thinking your browsing is compartmentalized. In reality, a script embedded in that site is talking to a local port on your phone. That local port is being monitored by an app. Suddenly, your private browsing session isn’t so private. The app now knows where you’ve been, what you’ve clicked on, and possibly who you are.

    The two worlds we like to think of as separate — app data and browser data — weren’t separate at all. 

    They were holding hands behind your back.

    Meta reportedly began doing this around September 2024. Yandex has been doing it for much longer, dating back to 2017. The scope isn’t small either. Meta’s method was detected on over 16,000 websites visited by users in the European Union. Yandex was spotted on 1,300 sites. These weren’t obscure blogs or niche platforms. They were everyday destinations, and whats scary is,  the tracking was silent.

    Google, which oversees Android, acknowledged that Meta and Yandex were using the system in “unintended ways.” That phrase is doing a lot of heavy lifting. What it really means is that Android’s architecture had a hole in it, and two of the world’s largest tech companies slipped through.

    Meta says it has paused the feature. Yandex insists no sensitive data was gathered. Both these responses sound totally rehearsed. The kind of language companies use when they’re not quite sorry, but very interested in not making things worse.

    The real problem isn’t just the technical exploit but rather the erosion of control. Users weren’t given a chance to opt in or out. They weren’t informed. There was no toggle, no warning, no prompt. Just dead silence.

    It raises a bigger question though: how many other “unintended” uses of our data are quietly running in the background of our lives? If even incognito mode can’t keep the walls up, what protections are left?

    This isn’t a story about hackers or leaks or malicious code. It’s a story about design. About companies that know more about the systems than users ever will. And about the quiet ways trust is lost, often not through big scandals, but through thousands of invisible moments that slip by unannounced.

    When people say they feel watched, it’s usually dismissed as paranoia. But what if the feeling is just awareness catching up to reality?

    That’s the part that sticks with me. Not the code or the cleverness of the exploit. The sheer quietness of it. The way your phone, your browser, and your apps can be working together against you, without making a sound. It’s fucking scary!

    Source

    Akhram Mohamed is the Editor of Geekhub.co.za and a longtime tech insider who’s spent 20+ years testing, launching, and talking about consumer gadgets. Formerly a VP at Huawei, he now writes with a critical eye and a deep love for tech that actually makes life better. When he’s not breaking down the latest devices, he’s gaming, building businesses, simplifying strategy, or podcasting about real-world leadership. Expect honest takes, sharp insights, and the occasional dad joke.

    Follow him on social media: @akreinvented

    Android data breach Meta Privacy Spying Yandex
    subscribe to Geekhub
    Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn WhatsApp
    Akhram Mohamed
    • Website

    Akhram Mohamed is the Editor of Geekhub.co.za and a longtime tech insider who’s spent 20+ years testing, launching, and talking about consumer gadgets. Formerly a VP at Huawei, he now writes with a critical eye and a deep love for tech that actually makes life better. When he’s not breaking down the latest devices, he’s gaming, building businesses, simplifying strategy, or podcasting about real-world leadership. Expect honest takes, sharp insights, and the occasional dad joke.

    Related Posts

    Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

    12 January 2026

    LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

    12 January 2026

    Be The Ultimate Holiday Hero With Sony’s Festive Gift Guide

    8 December 2025
    Opinion

    AI in 2026: Power,Control, and The Risk

    7 January 2026

    Is Customer Service Becoming a Thing of the Past?

    5 January 2026

    Writing With AI – We Need To Stop Pretending

    19 November 2025

    Hollywood 2.0: Now With Extra Algorithms and Mild Identity Crisis

    6 November 2025
    Don't Miss
    News

    Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

    By Staff Writer12 January 2026

    Apple became the world’s top smartphone brand in 2025, overtaking Samsung as iPhone shipments surged despite a slowing global smartphone market.

    LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

    12 January 2026

    X-Men Join the MCU in Avengers: Doomsday 

    7 January 2026

    The Batman Part II Just Got More Interesting With Sebastian Stan

    7 January 2026
    About Us
    About Us

    Geekhub was not created as a business and we are not journalists, we are just a bunch of geeks that love what we do and we share our collective passion with you, our valued readers.

    Contact: +27 83 346 2178

    Facebook X (Twitter) LinkedIn
    Our Picks

    Apple Claims Number One Spot in Global Smartphone Shipments for 2025

    12 January 2026

    LEGO’s New Smart Bricks Add Sensors and Sound — But Do They Change What LEGO Is Meant to Be?

    12 January 2026

    X-Men Join the MCU in Avengers: Doomsday 

    7 January 2026
    Most Popular

    AI and The Cost Of Convenience: What are we really giving up?

    27 November 2025

    OPPO Reno 12Pro 5G- A beautiful Mid-range Contender

    14 August 2024

    Huawei’s AI Chip Challenge: A David vs. Goliath Showdown?

    15 August 2024
    • Home
    • About us
    • News
    • Technology
    • Opinion
    • Wacky Stories
    • Get In Touch
    © 2026 Geekhub.co.za All Rights Reserved!

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.