According to a report by security solutions provider F-Secure, Xiaomi phones silently sent out user details to a remote server.
Responding to the allegations, Xiaomi vice president Hugo Barra said protecting user data and privacy is its top priority and it does not "upload or store private information or data without the permission of users".
It has also released a software update to tackle the issue.
F-Secure, in its report, demonstrated how a Xiaomi Redmi 1S phone was sending data including the user's IMEI, phone number, and phone numbers of contacts added to the phone book to a remote server.
The service, which allows Xiaomi users to send free text messages to each other, is turned on by default for all users and these messages are directed through its own servers.
Xiaomi's cloud messaging system tries to send the message via the Internet (if available) or otherwise sends it as a normal SMS message (if Internet is not available).
"Users' phonebook contact data or social graph information (ie the mapping between contacts) are never stored on Cloud Messaging servers, and message content (in encrypted form) is not kept for longer than necessary to ensure immediate delivery to the receiver," Barra said in a blogpost.
After the update, new users or users who factory reset their phones will have to enable the cloud messaging service manually from Settings option on their device.
Xiaomi has gained popularity across Asia Pacific offering feature-rich smartphones at affordable prices.
In India, it launched its Mi3 handset last month for Rs 13,999, exclusively with e-commerce major, Flipkart.
The company has already sold over 20,000 devices, which were put up on sale in tranches. The company claims to have sold 15,000 units within seconds of being put up for sale.
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