From the article: "bottom line on this one is that users click OK. Well we may or may not be able to trust users to read the screen before they click OK, it is not appropriate to paint this as an Android security flaw. What it really is, is a human security flaw. Therefore the hype is invalid, as this fact about the human condition has been known by almost every living being for hundreds of years."<p>I am not an Android user, but as a general computer user for years, this section annoyed me. The problem is that users frequently suffer from warning fatigue. After you see that screen 30x, you just don't see it anymore, no matter what it says. There are way too many people who don't take human factors into consideration when they design security features. Humans aren't robots. They aren't infallible. Even the best of us screw up. Software needs to be designed around that concept and provide multiple safety mechanisms and methods for notification. I'm not saying it's easy, but surely we can do better than just slapping a bunch of text into a dialog?