Wednesday, August 29, 2012

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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

Samsung Intercept, $99.99 Android Smartphone


Samsung Mobile and Sprint today introduced the Samsung Intercept, a stylish Android 2.1 -based smartphone, featuring Sprint 3G network (EVDO-Rev. 0), 3.2-inch touch-screen display, slide-out QWERTY keyboar, 3.2 MP camera, WiFi, GPS navigation, accelerometer and optical joystic. Samsung Intercept provides access to popular Google mobile services, including Google Search, Google Maps, YouTube and Gmail, and other applications available in Android Market today.



Additional features of Samsung Intercept:
  • 3.2 Megapixel camera and video camcorder
  • Stereo Bluetooth wireless technology
  • MP3 Player with MicroSD card slot (up to 32 GB)
  • Visual voicemail
  • Home screen that scrolls right to left
  • Access to personal and corporate e-mail
  • Access to social networking sites Facebook, Flickr and TwitterTM
  • Easily view Word, Excel, PowerPoint
  • Sprint TV, Sprint Football Live and NASCAR Sprint Cup MobileSM
Samsung Intercept will be available in two colors: Gray Steel and Satin Pink. Sprint is now offering the Samsung Intercept for pre-order, and the product itself will be available on July 11through all Sprint channels, including Web (www.sprint.com). Retail pricing will be just $99.99 (excluding taxes) after a $100 mail-in-rebate with a two-year service agreement on a new line activation or eligible upgrade on an Everything Plan with data.

Apple has licensed design patents to Microsoft.


SAN JOSE (Reuters) - Apple Inc licensed its prized design patentsto Microsoft Corp but with an "anti-cloning agreement" to prevent copying of its iPhone and iPad, an Apple executive said on Monday.
The testimony from Apple patent licensing director Boris Tekslercame in one of the most closely watched technology trials in years. Apple is accusing Samsung Electronics Co Ltd of copying its iPhone and iPad, while the Korean company says Apple infringes several of its wireless technology patents.

Apple had reached out to Samsung in 2010, hoping to strike an agreement with its rival on patent licensing before their dispute hit the courts.
Teksler testified that Apple offered a clutch of patents for licensing but, crucially, viewed patents related to what he called the "unique user experience" as a highly protected category.
Those included design patents at issue in the lawsuit, covering the look and feel of the iPhone and iPad. Teksler told jurors last week he could count on "on one hand" the instances Apple has licensed those patents.
Negotiations between Apple and Samsung did not produce a licensing agreement, and Apple filed a lawsuit in federal court in San Jose, California, in April 2011.
Apple's decision to license its design patents to Microsoft was consistent with its corporate strategy, Teksler said, because the agreement prohibited Microsoft from manufacturing copies.
"There was no right with respect to these design patents to build clones of any type," Teksler said.
The case in U.S. District Court, Northern District of California, is Apple Inc v. Samsung Electronics Co Ltd et al, No. 11-1846.

Wired reporter hack reveals perils of digital age





The perils of modern dependence on Internet-linked gadgets and digitally-stored memories remained a hot topic on Friday in the wake of a hack that wiped clean a Wired reporter's devices.
Mat Honan laid out at wired.com in gripping detail how his "digital life was destroyed" right down to irreplaceable photos of his baby daughter. Honan next week is to share his quest to repair the damage.
"The take-away from his bad experience is that people need to be careful with using an online service, especially a backup service,"Lookout Mobile Security engineer Tim Strazzere told AFP on Friday.
"The main part is to mitigate risk; he lost a lot of personal information."
Basic hacker skills were combined with "social engineering," the art of sweet-talking someone like acustomer service rep into bending rules during a phone call, to compromise Honan's Google, Twitter, and AppleID accounts.
Honan told of his @mat Twitter handle apparently being the coveted prize for hackers who deleted his Gmail account and erased the data from his iPhone, iPad and MacBook laptop computer to hide their trail.
The data-wiping feature was created by Apple to let people protect digital information if devices are lost or stolen.
He said his Twitter account was used to fire off offensive messages.
"In many ways, this was all my fault," Honan wrote. "My accounts were daisy-chained together."
"But what happened to me exposes vital security flaws in several customer service systems, most notably Apple's and Amazon's."
Hackers were able to get bits of information from Apple and Amazon tech support that helped them achieve their mission, according to Honan.
Apple did not respond to an AFP request for comment, but reportedly gave Honan a statement saying his data was "compromised by a person who had acquired personal information about the customer."
"In addition, we found that our own internal policies were not followed completely. We are reviewing all of our processes for resetting account passwords to ensure our customers' data is protected."
The "daisy chain" mistake Honan described is especially perilous when it involves making links between work and personal accounts, according to Strazzere.
An example would be using one's personal email address as the place to send password reset messages automatically generated by online services that require login information.
Getting access to a personal email account could then give hackers keys to any password protected services someone uses - such as Twitter, Facebook or office email.
"It is an interesting twist to the new age," Strazzere said. "These new capabilities are great tools, but it is a scary thing that if one gets compromised it can hurt you so much more."
His recommendations included keeping work and personal online accounts separate, even going so far as to have "throw-away" Web-based email accounts for matters such as password resets.
Pictures, documents or other data stored in the Internet "cloud" or on personal devices should be backed up as well as being encrypted.
Some online services provide the option of "two-factor authentication" that tightens security on password resets.

Hackers Force Apple, Amazon to Change Security Policy



Apple and Amazon are changing their security policies after hackers broke into a journalist's personal accounts. The change comes following a hack into Wired reporter Mat Honan's iCloud account, in which perpetrators wiped his iPad, Mac and iPhone.
Apple users can no longer reset their Apple IDs over the phone. Previously, Apple ID passwords could be swapped in exchange for the email address, billing address and the last four digits of the credit card associated with the account.
The hackers obtained the last four digits of Honan's credit card number by breaking into his account on Amazon, which is now also tightening its security features. Amazon had required even less than Apple to change a password -- only a user's name, email address and mailing address. The hackers found the final digits of Honan's credit card once they reset his Amazon password.
"Apple tech support gave the hackers access to my iCloud account. Amazon tech support gave them the ability to see a piece of information -- a partial credit card number -- that Apple used to release information," Honan wrote in a piece for Wired Friday.
Honan concisely summed up the loophole in the two company's security policies: "The very four digits that Amazon considers unimportant enough to display in the clear on the web are precisely the same ones that Apple considers secure enough to perform identity verification."
SEE ALSO: 25 Worst Passwords of 2011 [STUDY]
Though Apple is yet to release an official policy revision, users could no longer change their passwords over the phone Tuesday.
"In this particular case, the customer's data was compromised by a person who had acquired personal information about the customer," spokesperson Natalie Kerris told Wired. "We are reviewing all of our processes for resetting account passwords to ensure our customers' data is protected."
How could this hack have been avoided? How do you think companies should tighten their security policies? Let us know in the comments.

iPhone 5 design icons concepts

What would happen if Nike, Audi, Paul Smith, Rolex or Barbour designed the new iPhone 5? We kick our imaginations into overdrive with these new designs of the iPhone 5.
A quick note to say that none of the companies have endorsed these designs.

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

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