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Submission + - Chinese site in signal-jammer sting could pay record $34.9M FCC fine

alphadogg writes: A Chinese electronics vendor accused of selling signal jammers to U.S. consumers could end up leading the market in one dubious measure: the largest fine ever imposed by the Federal Communications Commission. The agency wants to fine CTS Technology US$34,912,500 for allegedly marketing 285 models of jammers over more than two years. CTS boldly—and falsely—claimed that some of its jammers were approved by the FCC, according to the agency’s enforcement action released Thursday. Conveniently, CTS’ product detail pages also include a button to “report suspicious activity.”
The proposed fine, which would be bigger than any the FCC has levied for anti-competitive behavior, not airing children’s shows, or a wardrobe malfunction, comes from adding up the maximum fines for each model of jammer the company allegedly sold in the U.S. The agency also ordered CTS, based in Shenzhen, China, to stop marketing illegal jammers to U.S. consumers and identify the buyer of each jammer it sold in the U.S.

Submission + - LTE and GSM wireless getting hitched thanks to new technology

alphadogg writes: In the hunt for more spectrum to speed up mobile networks, Vodafone and Huawei Technologies have successfully tested a technology that lets LTE and GSM share the same frequencies. The speed of future mobile networks will depend on the amount of spectrum mobile operators can get their hands on. The more they get, the wider the roads they can build. One thing they can do to get more space is to reuse frequencies that are currently used for older technologies such as GSM and 3G. But that isn’t as easy as sounds, as operators still have a lot of voice and messaging traffic in those older networks. However, using a technology called GL DSS (GSM-LTE Dynamic Spectrum Sharing) Vodafone and Huawei have shown a way to allow GSM and LTE to coexist.

Submission + - Need to move to IPv6 highlighted as Microsoft runs out of US address space (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Microsoft has been forced to start using its global stock of IPv4 addresses to keep its Azure cloud service afloat in the U.S., highlighting the growing importance of making the shift to IP version 6. The newer version of the Internet Protocol adds an almost inexhaustible number of addresses thanks to a 128-bit long address field, compared to the 32 bits used by version 4. The IPv4 address space has been fully assigned in the U.S., meaning there are no additional addresses available, Microsoft said in a blog post earlier this week. http://blog.azure.com/2014/06/... This requires the company to use the IPv4 address space available to it globally for new services, it said.

Submission + - Behind the Great Firewall: What it's really like to log on from China (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: China makes headlines every other week for its censorship of the Internet, but few people outside the country know what it's like to live with those access controls, or how to get around them. This IDG News Service writer has lived in China for close to six years and censorship has been a near constant, lurking in the background ready to "harmonize" the Web and throw a wrench in his online viewing. It's been especially evident this month. Google's services, which don't follow the strict censorship rules, are currently blocked. How long that will last is unknown, but it coincides with the 25th anniversary of the Tiananmen Square protests earlier this month — an event the Chinese government wants no one to remember.

Submission + - Cisco's Internet of Things chief resigns (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Cisco Systems' point man on the Internet of Things (IoT) has resigned just as industries start to explore how millions of sensors and devices can be connected over networks. Cisco confirmed on Thursday that Guido Jouret, who was vice president and general manager of the company's Internet of Things Group, has left to "pursue a new opportunity." Rob Soderbery, senior vice president of Cisco's Enterprise Networking Group, which oversees the IoT division, will now oversee it directly, Cisco said. Cisco recently announced it was earmarking an additional $150 million over the next few years to invest in startups, including in the IoT space. http://www.networkworld.com/ne...

Submission + - Inside United Airlines' tech nerve center (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: IDG News Service goes inside United Airlines' network operations center on the 27th floor of the Willis (formerly Sears) Tower in downtown Chicago, where the company oversees some 1,800 daily flights.
The NOC is in charge of everything from figuring out how planes should be loaded to distribute weight correctly to assigning which aircraft will fly which route. The space is massive, with about 375 workstations that are staffed across three shifts, 365 days a year, as there is a United flight in the air at all times. The users rely on virtualized applications mostly housed in one of two big offsite data centers.

Submission + - Women in Technology Hall of Fame inducting 5 (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: WITI (Women in Technology International) has named five new inductees for its Hall of Fame, http://www.witi.com/center/wit... including executives with IBM, AT&T and EMC, a well-known serial entrepreneur and a force in the move to code for public good. WITI, which is celebrating its 25th anniversary this year, will honor inductees at a ceremony on June 2 in Santa Clara. This year's inductees are: This year’s inductees are: EMC's Orna Berry, Code for America's Jennifer Pahlka, ClearStreet's Kim Polese, AT&T's Kris Rinne and IBM's Lauren States.

Submission + - Florida commuter's illegal jammer blocked more than cell talkers (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Some drivers would love to have a cellphone-free bubble around their cars, but when a Florida man allegedly created one every day on his commute, it didn't necessarily make the highway a safer place.
Jason R. Humphreys of Seffner, Fla., operated a cellphone jammer in his Toyota Highlander sport-utility vehicle during his daily commute for as long as two years before the FCC and the local sheriff tracked him down, the FCC said this week. Now he's facing $48,000 in fines, with 30 days to pay or file a response. Humphreys told the FCC he used the jammer to keep people from talking on their cellphones while driving. Talking on a cellphone while driving is legal in Florida, even without a hands-free kit, though texting while driving is banned. Using a cellphone jammer is illegal for everyone but federal law enforcement, regardless of intent, according to the FCC. Not only do jammers prevent consumers from making emergency calls, but they can disrupt critical communications by safety agencies, the FCC said.

Submission + - Google mulling Wi-Fi for cities with Google Fiber (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Google is considering deploying Wi-Fi networks in towns and cities covered by its Google Fiber high-speed Internet service. The disclosure is made in a document Google is circulating to 34 cities that are the next candidates to receive Google Fiber in 2015. Specific details of the Wi-Fi plan are not included in the document, which was seen by IDG News Service, but Google says it will be "discussing our Wi-Fi plans and related requirements with your city as we move forward with your city during this planning process."

Submission + - China working on Linux replacement for Windows XP (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: China is working on a Linux operating system that can replace the now-vulnerable Windows XP and protect the country’s networking infrastructure.The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology will “beef up support for the development of such an OS,” according to China’s state news agency Xinhua. The agency says about 70% of PCs in China still run Windows XP despite the fact that Microsoft has shut down security updates for it, which makes XP progressively more vulnerable to attacks.

Submission + - How Apple's billion dollar sapphire bet will pay off (networkworld.com) 1

alphadogg writes: Apple is making a billion dollar bet on sapphire as a strategic material for mobile devices such as the iPhone, iPad and perhaps an iWatch. Though exactly what the company plans to do with the scratch-resistant crystal – and when – is still the subject of debate. Apple is creating its own supply chain devoted to producing and finishing synthetic sapphire crystal in unprecedented quantities. The new Mesa, Ariz., plant, in a partnership with sapphire furnace maker GT Advanced Technologies, will make Apple one of the world’s largest sapphire producers when it reaches full capacity, probably in late 2014. By doing so, Apple is assured of a very large amount of sapphire and insulates itself from the ups and downs of sapphire material pricing in the global market.

Submission + - Pew surveys Americans on likely scientific advances 50 years from now (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Americans are optimistic about scientific inventions on the horizon, though are cautious about future uses of DNA, robots, drones and always-on implants, according to the latest Pew Research Center survey on future technology. http://www.pewinternet.org/fil... Asked about the likelihood of certain advances 50 years from now, survey respondents were most sure that lab-grown custom organs for transplant will happen (81%). Only 19% expect humans will be able to control the weather by then.

Submission + - Symbian co-founder crowdsources heartfelt song born of Boston Marathon tragedy (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Stephen Randall, a cofounder of one-time mobile OS kingpin Symbian, has crowdsourced a song that pays tribute to those killed in and those who survived the 2013 Boston Marathon bombings. "We Will Run Again" http://www.stephenrandallmusic... includes more than 90 voices of people and groups who uploaded their rendition of the chorus to SoundCloud, according to Randall, a mobile technology entrepreneur who designed the first digital guitar.

Submission + - Some customers aren't sold on US transition to IP networks (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Many U.S. residents who have written the FCC https://fccgov.uservoice.com/f... to voice concerns about the move from copper-based telephone networks to Internet Protocol http://www.networkworld.com/ne... are concerned about the potential effects on health from mobile-headset radiation and what happens when the electricity goes out. More than 50 people have commented so far, with many appearing to be part of a coordinated effort to oppose the IP transition, although it's unclear what group is coordinating the comments.

Submission + - Akamai admits its OpenSSL patch was faulty, reissues keys (networkworld.com)

alphadogg writes: Akamai Technologies, whose network handles up to 30% of all Internet traffic, said Sunday a researcher found a fault in custom code that the company thought shielded most of its customers from the Heartbleed bug. As a result, Akamai is now reissuing all SSL certificates and security keys used to create encrypted connections between its customer's websites and visitors to those sites. "In short, we had a bug," wrote Andy Ellis, Akamai's CTO, in a blog post. https://blogs.akamai.com/2014/...

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