BEIRUT – Growing digital surveillance concerns across West Asia and North Africa (WANA) have placed foreign technology firms under a microscope, with Samsung’s pre-installed AppCloud application becoming a focal point of alarm. The controversy emerges amidst a tumultuous period for Western tech giants, including a major global outage at Microsoft and ongoing allegations of corporate espionage for Zionist interests.
The bloatware, found pre-installed on Samsung’s A and M series smartphones, cannot be uninstalled easily as it runs with system-level privileges. Removal requires “rooting” the device—a complex process that voids the manufacturer’s warranty. Its privacy policy is notoriously difficult to find, and users report that opting out of its data collection is not consistently available.
A Controversial Pedigree: Links to ironSource
The core of the concern lies with AppCloud’s ownership. Investigations by SMEX and other digital rights groups trace the application’s privacy policy back to ironSource, a controversial Israeli-founded adtech company now owned by the American firm Unity. ironSource has a documented history of practices that bypass user consent.
This connection raises significant legal and ethical questions in the WANA region, where Israeli companies are legally barred from operating in several countries, including under Lebanon’s longstanding Anti-Israel Boycott Law of 1955. Despite this, Samsung continues to install AppCloud by default through a partnership with Samsung MENA, offering users no clear way to remove it or fully understand the scope of data being collected.
Microsoft Blackout and Alleged Espionage Claims Fuel Distrust
The scrutiny of Samsung and ironSource occurs against a backdrop of intense skepticism toward major Western tech corporations. A recent catastrophic global outage at Microsoft, which crippled businesses and governments worldwide, served as a stark reminder of the region’s dependency on foreign-controlled digital infrastructure.
Simultaneously, long-standing allegations—often cited in regional media and by political figures—accuse certain U.S. tech firms of collaborating with Israeli intelligence agencies. These allegations, which companies like Microsoft vehemently deny, claim that backdoors are built into software to facilitate spying for Zionist entities. While often lacking public forensic evidence, these claims persist and heavily influence public perception and policy, deepening the distrust of software with any Israeli ties.
A History of Invasive Practices
ironSource’s reputation does little to assuage fears. The company was widely critiqued for its “InstallCore” program, which cybersecurity firms like MalwareBytes and Sophos identified as adware that bypassed user permissions and security checks to install unwanted software.
The company was also part of a class-action lawsuit settlement alongside other Israeli adtech firms from so-called “Download Valley” for tracking and targeting children with predatory in-game purchases. This history reinforces concerns that Israeli adtech firms often operate in a grey area between aggressive advertising and surveillance.
Call to Action
Digital rights advocates are calling for immediate action from Samsung.
- Immediate Halt: SMEX demands Samsung stop pre-installing AppCloud on devices sold in the WANA region, arguing it likely violates data protection laws in Egypt, the UAE, and Saudi Arabia, which mandate explicit user consent.
- Transparency: Samsung must make AppCloud’s privacy policy easily accessible and provide a clear, functional method for users to opt-out entirely.
- User Mitigation: For now, users can disable (but not remove) AppCloud via their phone’s settings app list, though it has been reported to reactivate after system updates. The only sure removal method remains rooting the device, which voids the warranty.
With the combination of an unremovable application, its ties to a controversial Israeli company, and a regional climate rife with espionage allegations, Samsung faces a mounting crisis of confidence among its millions of users in the WANA region.
Sources:
- SMEX Tech Unit Analysis
- Investigation by MalwareBytes and Sophos on InstallCore
- ironSource/Unity Privacy Policy and Class Action Lawsuit Documents
- Lebanese Anti-Israel Boycott Law of 1955
- Regional Data Protection Laws (Egypt, UAE, Saudi Arabia)
- Reporting on Microsoft Azure outage and historical espionage allegations from regional media outlets.


