Category: Uncategorized (Page 9 of 11)

Facebook App Still Isn’t Approved

Facebook 3.0 still delayed.Apple’s been hard at work trying to remedy the disease that is the App Store review process. It’s lengthy, arbitrary, and creates more drama for the company than other issue. But Phil Schiller can only be in so many places at once, and try as it might, Apple is still letting apps fall through the cracks. Big apps. Highly anticipated apps. Facebook 3.0 apps.

We’ve been hearing about the new Facebook app for months, and it really does sound awesome. It adds a lot of features I won’t re-reprint here. But the app is stuck in review limbo, awaiting the whimsical approval of the 40-man review team, and even the developers are starting to speak out.

Facebook 3.0 developer Joe Hewitt has been the man primarily responsible for keeping the public up to date on the app’s progress. You really have to applaud the guy for making his submission public because it puts a lot of pressure on Apple (a move Real copied this week). Hewitt’s gone public again, this time with a long list of level-headed complaints for the review team. My favorite goes like this:

Oh, but you say that iPhone apps are different, because they run native code and can do scary things that web pages can’t? Again, you’re wrong, because iPhone apps are sandboxed and have scarcely any more privileges than a web app. About the only scary thing they can do outside the sandbox is access your address book, but Apple can easily fix that by requiring they ask permission first, just like they must do to track your location.

Be sure to read the rest of the post. It could have been a lot of whining and moaning and “I’m smarter than all of Apple combined.” Instead, Hewitt put together a solid argument for the dissolution of the App Store review process.

Palm Wouldn’t Violate Your Privacy, Would They?

The Palm Pre girl looking creepy.Yeah, they would. In a big way. This is something that most of us would probably expect from Apple, but Palm? Palm is supposed to be the anti-Apple (though I’m not sure what an apple’s polar opposite would be). They’re the ones saving us loads of money with Sprint, offering a physical keyboard, bringing multitasking to the masses. They’re also the ones recording your GPS location once a day along with some other personal data.

The privacy breach was first discovered by Joey Hess, a Debian developer who had started to tinker with WebOS a while back. When he noticed his Pre sending data to Palm on a daily basis he wondered, as most of us probably would, just what the phone was sending. Without digging too deep, it turned out to be the following:

{ “errorCode”: 0, “timestamp”: 1249855555954.000000, “latitude”: 36.594108, “longitude”: -82.183260, “horizAccuracy”: 2523, “heading”: 0, “velocity”: 0, “altitude”: 0, “vertAccuracy”: 0 }

Yes, that is his global position at an accuracy similar to Google Maps. The phone was also sending a list of every application Hess had used, along with usage duration for each app. There were also the expected crashlogs and then a file containing every app Hess used, regardless of whether they were Palm approved or not.

Obviously this has some pretty serious implications. No one likes to know that this data is being collected, and while it’s usually safer to assume that someone is gathering this stuff, the fact that Palm is doing it, after all their horn-blowing about the iPhone, is a tough pill to swallow.

Any company willing to do this sort of thing has to know it will be found out and cover its ass accordingly, right? Right. Palm looks drum-tight in their privacy policy, which states this:

Location Based Services. When you use location based services, we will collect, transmit, maintain, process, and use your location and usage data (including both real time geographic information and information that can be used to approximate location) in order to provide location based and related services, and to enhance your device experience.

On first read you might think, “Gee, that once a day collection seems to fall well outside reasonable collection for Location Based Services.” You’d be right, but it’s the second half of the clause where they’ve got you. That part about enhancing your device experience pretty much has you nailed, unless of course you’re able to prove that this collection is doing nothing of the sort. I’m pretty sure you won’t be able to pull that off.

Regardless of clever language, though, it does fall to Palm to alert the user that they are collecting this type of data. That’s why location based applications on smartphones typically ask the user’s permission to access the phone’s location. Not doing so turns your data gathering into one thing: spying. For Palm, it’s spying on a massive scale.

Since the story broke a couple hours ago, Palm has issued the following statement:

Palm takes privacy very seriously, and offers users ways to turn data collecting services on and off. Our privacy policy is like many policies in the industry and includes very detailed language about potential scenarios in which we might use a customer’s information, all toward a goal of offering a great user experience. For instance, when location based services are used, we collect their information to give them relevant local results in Google Maps. We appreciate the trust that users give us with their information, and have no intention to violate that trust.

Odd. I thought collecting that sort of data without letting your customers know was, by definition, a violation of trust. It also seems incredibly convenient to neglect to mention just where your customers can turn off those data collection services.

For a full list of the data Palm is getting from your phone, head to Hess’s website.

Reading in the Bathroom Can Be a Terrifying Experience

Koji Suzuki's 'Drop' toilet paper.Koji Suzuki likes to scare people. The famed Japanese author has written bloodcurdling tales like “The Ring,” which have been adapted into films in Japan and Hollywood. Suzuki has a new idea for scaring people, one which involves the time you spend on the toilet.

Suzuki has teamed up with Hayashi Paper Company, which makes novelty paper products for public restroom, to print his novella “Drop” on toilet paper. The story is about a goblin living in a public restroom, making the horror all the more real as you sit on a chilly seat.

The story is nine chapters long, with multiple copies on each roll, so you can pick up where you left off without too much trouble. I’m sure green activists will have something to say about encouraging waste through the product, but I’d still back the product. Who said it can’t be printed on the biodegradable stuff, right?

Each roll costs 210 yen, which is about $2. Think James Patterson will be releasing any toilet paper thrillers any time soon?

GeoHot Beats the Dev Team to 3GS Unlock

George Hotz looking hot.Alright, so the headline is a little bit misleading, but in a sense it’s true. The Dev-Team has had an exploit for the iPhone 3GS set and ready to go, but they want to wait until 3.1 so that Apple doesn’t immediately patch their hole. George Hotz got tired of waiting, so he’s releasing the jailbreak himself.

As of yet there aren’t many details, and not many folks have tested it, but those who have are reporting a successful unlock. GeoHot, or George Hotz, has the necessary file listed on purplera1n.com. After the jailbreak, you should be able to use ultrasn0w for the unlock.

I think the best part of this whole saga is Hotz’s comments regarding the Dev-Team decision to hold of on release. I’ll send you off to backup, jailbreak, and unlock with his words:

Normally I don’t make tools for the general public, and rather wait for the dev team to do it. But guys, whats up with waiting until 3.1? That isn’t how the game is played. We release, Apple fixes, we find new holes. It isn’t worth waiting because you might have the “last” hole in the iPhone. What last hole…this isn’t golf. I’ll find a new one next week.

Well said, George. Good luck jailbreaking – enjoy your holiday.

Nudie iPhone App Goes Live, Gets Pulled

The first iPhone app showing any sort of nudity debuted today and has since been pulled from the app store.

The app, called Hottest Girls, has been around longer than the parental controls that could supposedly allow explicit content to be viewed within an app on Apple’s iPhone. Previous to today’s update, the application simply showed pictures of girls (mostly asian) in various types of scanty clothing. The app was supposed to be the first to feature adult content.

There’s been no word concerning the removal of the app from the app store yet. I’ll be surprised to see Apple try to keep the pics from returning. It’s not particularly hard to find porn on the phone, considering it has a nearly fully featured browser. You can imagine, though, the massive influx of applications we’ll see if porn apps get the official sanction.

For now, looks like you’ll have to stick to Safari to get your mobile porn on.

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