Saturday, May 26, 2012

Jailbreak, app piracy, and the true cost of theft

 

Jailbreak-iPhone-iPad-hero-620x345

Now that the iOS 5.1.1 jailbreak is available for the iPhone 4S, new iPad, and older devices, the subject of jailbreak in general is getting a lot of attention again, and with it, the dark side of jailbreaking. It seems whenever someone wants to attack the very concept of jailbreak, one of the first salvos unleashed is app piracy. The sad, ugly truth is that those attacks are made possible because some people who jailbreak do so mainly or entirely to get "free" apps. And the sadder, uglier truth is that there's no such thing as "free". Everything has a cost. Even and especially theft.

We're going to use the words "theft" and "steal" here instead of piracy because that's what we're talking about. Steve Jobs once raised a pirate flag at Apple as a symbol of their counterculture and ideals, and the jailbreak community has embraced that spirit.

By no means has the jailbreak community embraced theft.

Both iMore and Mobile Nations have a zero-tolerance policy when it comes to even the discussion of piracy. We place an incredibly high value on developers and the apps they make, and don't want to play any part, directly or indirectly, in disseminating information that hurts developers, the iOS platform, and the legitimate jailbreak community.

Likewise, prominent jailbreak developers have gone out of their way, numerous times, to distance themselves from app theft and ask those using their software not to steal apps.

There's a reason for that. App theft is not a victimless crime. It hurts the iOS platform, it hurts iOS developers, and because of that, it ultimately hurts iOS users.

Stealing apps isn't free. It comes with a very real cost.

 

[VIA] iMORE

Thursday, May 24, 2012

New iPad overtakes original iPad in the US after only 2 months: Report

ipaddd 520x245 New iPad overtakes original iPad in the US after only 2 months: Report

A new report from app analytics company Localytics claims Apple's latest iPad model is now more widely used in the United States than the first-generation iPad, a mere two months after the former hit the market.

We already reported usage was off to a very strong start, but Localytics says the new iPad is now up nearly 50 percent compared to its launch-week share.

loca New iPad overtakes original iPad in the US after only 2 months: Report

The report will be published on Localytics' blog later today but was shared with The Next Web in advance. The company's app analytics solutions are used by companies like Fox, AT&T, Rhapsody, Qualcomm and The New York Times.

According to Localytics, its stats show that the iPad 2 remains the most used of all three generations of iPads by a margin (60 percent vs. 20 percent for both the other tablets) but that the new iPad has overtaken the original one in a hurry.

Indeed, the third-gen tablet keeps selling like hotcakes as Apple makes it increasingly available in stores worldwide.

The device sports a new dual-core A5X processor with quad-core graphics, and a Retina Display with a resolution of 2048 by 1536 pixels.

Gartner, meanwhile, says iOS continues to be the dominant tablet OS and is projected to account for 61.4 percent of worldwide media tablet sales to end users in 2012. In other words, the iPad's strongest rival remains the iPad.








Oliver Yatco

Tuesday, May 8, 2012

Hackers break into 55,000 Twitter accounts, leaving passwords bare


Hackers break into 55,000 Twitter accounts, leaving passwords bare

2012 05 08 15h26 13 520x245 Hackers break into 55,000 Twitter accounts, leaving passwords bare

In a massive leak, some 55,000 Twitter accounts have been compromised, leaving them open for abuse. According to AirDemon, accounts belonging to celebrities were attacked in the process.

The leak is large enough that 5 PasteBin pages were required to host the list. I'm going to link to them, only so that you can see if you are among the hacked: one, two, three, four, five. The pages have racked up thousands of views, implying that the accounts could have already been compromised. If you see any funny tweets in your stream, this might be why.

According to initial reports, a 'Twitter insider' said the following [TNW has not verified this remark, so treat it appropriately]: "The micro blogging platform is aware of this hack and was taking necessary actions to save those people's account from malicious activity." I'm leery of the statement as I can't imagine that anyone close to Twitter would call it a 'micro blogging platform,' but for now that also conjecture.

TNW has reached out to Twitter for comment or confirmation.

TNW, after a glance through the lists, can state that many accounts present appear to be bot accounts, or at least have that look. Some however, are not, containing passwords that are perfectly reasonable (connected to the name in the email address, and very breakable).

What can you do to protect yourself? Change your passwords regularly, and ensure that they are strong, employing capital letters, and both alpha and numeric characters. Still, so long as there are groups that get their jollies by creating a bit of mayhem, this sort of thing won't stop happening.

Check if you are on the lists, and then go think up a new passwords. You haven't done so recently, have you?

Update: Twitter got back to TNW and informed us that they are actively looking into the situation. In the interim they have sent password resets to affected accounts. The company also stated, as we noted, that the list conatins many spammy accounts. When we hear more, we'll put it here.


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Oliver Yatco

Article: Google Makes Its Google+ Notifications In Gmail More Interactive


Google Makes Its Google+ Notifications In Gmail More Interactive - TechCrunch

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Oliver Yatco

Sunday, May 6, 2012

Samsung Galaxy S III Finally Official, Packs A 4.8-Inch 720p Super AMOLED HD Display With Eye Tracking Technology


Samsung Galaxy S III Finally Official, Packs A 4.8-Inch 720p Super AMOLED HD Display With Eye Tracking Technology

1The day we've all been waiting for has finally arrived, and Samsung just unveiled its third-generation Galaxy smartphone. As expected, it's going by the moniker Galaxy S III, and it's stuffed to the gullet with cutting-edge hardware and software tweaks:

read more


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Oliver Yatco