To attend the championship this year, fans must use a digital ticket provided through UEFA’s Ticket application. According to Heise, this app requires access to personal data, including name, email, phone number, and GPS permissions. While app store descriptions note the collection of personal information and activity data for analysis purposes, they omit any mention of location sharing.

  • @[email protected]
    link
    fedilink
    English
    36 months ago

    When and how did you check this? The following quotes are taken from the posted article, emphasis mine.

    UEFA told us that all location data is anonymized and only tracked on match days, starting six hours before kick-off and ending six hours after the match. The data aids in managing fan flow and ensuring timely updates via push notifications. UEFA’s spokesperson said this location data is “an invaluable tool” in maintaining safety.

    For starters, we are reluctant to believe that both Bayerischer Rundfunk (who made the video in collaboration with the actual people involved in the monitoring process) and Heise would have mislabeled the UEFA Ticket app instead of saying it is the EURO 2024 app.

    As it stands, Stack Diary cannot independently verify what the insides of the Ticket app look like because the tickets have been sold out since early June, and you are required a QR code to see what the app looks like. If you have more information to give, please get in touch with us.

    According to Heise, the app requires explicit GPS permissions, which are not disclosed on the Android or iOS privacy pages for the UEFA Mobile Tickets application. When checking with Exodus, both the Tickets and the EURO app require “ACCESS_FINE_LOCATION” and “ACCESS_COARSE_LOCATION” permissions, which allow an app to access precise location data using GPS, Wi-Fi, and mobile networks.

    The entire point of this story is that the UEFA ticket app requires access to location functions without telling the user. Have you either used a tool like exodus or extracted the source code of the ticket app from the apk and manually reviewed it?

    Also, you sound like you’re under the assumption that users reported this. You realize that this was originally reported by the German IT news outlet heise.de and not by complaints from random users right?

    • @vxx
      link
      3
      edit-2
      6 months ago

      Right after I read the article and before I left the comment.

      From Germany through the Google Play store

      I’m alaware Heise reported it, but they said themselves that a user reported it to them and they didn’t add that they checked it. The article above even had to correct them that it wasn’t the app Heise called out.

      • @[email protected]
        link
        fedilink
        English
        -1
        edit-2
        6 months ago

        What? The Heise article talks about how both apps access location APIs, but UEFA only publicly acknowledges that the second app tracks. The issue here is that the ticket app tracks, but UEFA says it doesn’t. The issue here is that UEFA is lying.

        Looking at the permissions on the German Google Play store will obviously show that location is not used by the ticket app, because the entire issue being reported is that location is accessed without the knowledge of the users and without being reported in the app stores. This is why I asked how you checked, you need to check the app with something like Exodus or rev eng it and look at the actual api calls made in the source code.

        I feel like I’m taking crazy pills. Do you just not believe that developers could lie, either directly or by omission, about what data their app collects?