+ - Enumerating Android installed applications without special permissions->
While analyzing traffic for an Android app, we figured out that the app was sending competitor data back home, dug up a little and found some interesting design flaw on the Android platform that enforces no special permissions on retreiving installed applications list."
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+ - German Ministry of Education throws away PCs for 190,000 € due to infection->
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+ - National Security Draft for Fining Tech Company "Noncompliance" on Wiretapping
+ - Older Is Wiser: Study Shows Older Software Developers Still Learn New Tricks->
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+ - Tech Talent Sortage and Guestworkers->
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+ - Why iTunes is dying->
Apple will reportedly use a streaming service to drive sales of songs on iTunes, and will use advertisements to help boost revenues even further. That may appease content providers, but consumers who can pay for unlimited access to Spotify's library without advertisements wouldn't even consider it.
By the time Apple does get its streaming service off the ground, customers will be too entrenched in competing services to be swayed by another that doesn't offer any advantage. As the concept of "owning" content becomes more outdated, so will iTunes."
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+ - Poll Idea: How many times have you signed your name in the last 12 months?
+ - Windows Phone Overtakes BlackBerry in UK Smartphone Wars->
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Comment: Re:Missing in action. (Score 1) 142
Comment: Re:20 years passed (Score 1) 422
Comment: Re:Loaded language? (Score 1) 374
Comment: Re:No expectation (Score 1) 332
Comment: Re:No expectation (Score 1) 332
You have whatever guarantee the law and/or lawful contract provides. If you keep your money in a bank account (not a deposit box) then you are trusting the bank's guarantee they will not tamper with your balance. In most countries, that's a perfectly reasonable thing to expect.
Obligatory "except in Cypress" comment.
Comment: Re:No expectation (Score 1) 332
I'm wondering how this compares with snail mail. If I write a letter, hold on to it a few days at my home, mail it, the recipient reads it then holds on to it for some period of time. Except in cases where the sender or recipient voluntarily gives up the information, wouldn't a search warrant be required for any government official to get the info? They must get a warrant to search either house. They can't intercept mail without a warrant either, I believe.
For email, usually a user name and password is required for you to access your email client so that you can read or send emails. That implies, even if the email is transmitted in clear text, that some sort of privacy is expected. Just like wire taps on telephones, you should need a warrant to 'tap' into the net to capture emails as they are sent. Where I'm storing the email is irrelevant; username/password is something like a locked door, or even an unlocked door. Without probable cause, the government can't just walk in.