In a blog post on Monday, the company states its technical staff discovered the bug in March but they decided against disclosing the issue to users because they hadn’t found anyone that had been affected.
The tech giant also says its Privacy & Data Protection Office decided the company was not required to report the security issue. They looked at the “type of data involved, whether we could accurately identify the users to inform, whether there was any evidence of misuse, and whether there were any actions a developer or user could take in response. None of these thresholds were met in this instance,” according to Ben Smith, a Google vice president of engineering.
Up to 438 applications may have had access to the vulnerability, but Google said it had found no evidence that outside developers were aware of the security flaw and no indication that any user profiles were misused.
The incident could face additional scrutiny because of a memo to senior executives reportedly prepared by the company’s policy and legal teams that warned of embarrassment for Google similar to what happened to Facebook earlier this year if it went public with the vulnerability.
The decision to shut down was part of a broad review of how much user information Google shares with third-party developers. The company, a unit of Alphabet, also said it is limiting the apps that can work with Gmail, the company’s email service, and constraining the amount of data that developers can access through Android, Google’s smartphone software.
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