Closed GoogleCodeExporter closed 8 years ago
AppLog:
GTalkSMS Preferences
notifiedAddress: tre***********@aol.com
useDifferentAccount: true
useGoogleMapUrl: true
locale: default
smsMagicWord: GTalkSMS
manuallySpecifyServerSettings: true
batteryNotificationInterval: 20
serviceName: gmail.com
startAtBoot: true
showStatusIcon: true
markSmsReadOnReply: true
useCompression: false
notifyBatteryInStatus: true
notificationIncomingSmsType: same
notifyInMuc: true
login: x********e@gmail.com
ringtone: content://media/external/audio/media/216
displayIconIndex: 0
smsReplySeparate: true
startOnPowerConnected: true
startOnWifiConnected: true
notifySmsDelivered: false
xmppSecurityMode: opt
debugLog: true
smsNumber: 15
connectOnMainscreenShow: true
notifySmsSent: true
callLogsNumber: 10
roomPassword: gtalksms
serverHost: talk.google.com
showSentSms: true
serverPort: 5222
mucServer: conference.jwchat.org
notifyApplicationConnection: true
notifyBattery: true
notifyIncomingCalls: true
GTalkSMS Version: 3.1
Android API: 8
Kernel info: 2.6.32.21-g899d047
htc-kernel@and18-2 )
#1 PREEMPT Tue Oct 26 16:10:01 CST 2010
--------- beginning of /dev/log/system
--------- beginning of /dev/log/main
08-14 18:42:21.947 I/gtalksms( 7525): Update presence:
2owlhavp9wowi@id.talk.google.com - Offline
08-14 18:42:21.947 I/gtalksms( 7525): Update presence: tre***********@aol.com -
Online
Original comment by trefight...@gmail.com
on 14 Aug 2011 at 11:46
Ok, a nice feedback loop, two notification mechanisms chained together. You
could disable the battery notifications, but I this won't solve the underlying
problem.
How to you suggest that we solve this? Blacklist some phone numbers?
Original comment by fschm...@gmail.com
on 15 Aug 2011 at 9:10
That was the first thought that came to my mind: blacklist the AIM short codes,
but upon further investigation it looks like either AIM changes short-codes
every now and then or it has a crap-load of them under its dominion. So vanilla
blacklisting wouldn't work.
I also through about just warning users to disable IM->text capabilities, but
that just seems so draconian. I'd save that as a last resort.
I do not develop on the Android platform all that often (yet), but I'm pretty
sure that most of the following solution(s) would be feasible whilst
maintaining gtalkSMS's amazingly minuscule use of battery life. They're all
based on some sort of feedback loop detection (which could be turned off or
"customized" by the end user, of course).
To accomplish such protection, one could:
1. Attach some sort of hidden identifier in the form of an "invisible hand" to
outgoing messages (I'm not sure how the SMS/MMS or XMPP protocols work, but
this would definitely be a viable solution with the HTTP protocol xP). Use this
identifier w/ #3 down there and be *sure* that the message is being looped from
gtalkSMS and not some person spamming their heart out. -- not sure of its
feasibility.
2. Scan incoming messages and compare them to the messages gtalkSMS sends out
using statistics/heuristics to determine an acceptable level of similarity. If
a message arrives that is deemed "too similar," trigger some sort of feedback
loop prevention in the form of temporary blockage or blacklisting. Of course,
such a blacklist would be manipulable from the end-user perspective
(add/delete/edit entries). -- would work instantly, but might misfire if
someone sends a message that looks too similar to a gtalkSMS response/alert.
3. Keep track of the frequency of the messages received, and if messages are
determined to be coming in from the same source too frequently, trigger the
feedback loop prevention. This "prevention" would include the ability for the
user to disable it when it activates; e.g. "possible blah blah feedback loop
detected blah blah. Click this button to ignore (or something)." This would be
in the form of a popup of some kind, and in the interim between the message
popping up and the button press, incoming/outgoing messages would be throttled
(so the phone wouldn't lock up). -- would probably work the best, but it
wouldn't work instantly. The user's phone would already have sent/received for
a bit before the "feedback loop" status of the correspondence could be
determined. Scary.
4. Some combination of the aforementioned.
Not really sure (again, I don't dev Android), but hopefully I sparked some
bright ideas? :)
Original comment by trefight...@gmail.com
on 15 Aug 2011 at 6:02
I am going to add an resource filter, which will for example filter out Android
resources. If the filter turns out to be practicable, well could extend that
for this issue also.
Original comment by fschm...@gmail.com
on 9 Nov 2011 at 9:54
Original comment by fschm...@gmail.com
on 1 Dec 2011 at 5:35
Fixed and deployed with GTalkSMS 3.4
Original comment by Florent....@gmail.com
on 7 Jan 2012 at 3:20
Original issue reported on code.google.com by
trefight...@gmail.com
on 14 Aug 2011 at 11:27