Apr
15
2009
Alyssey writes “The Mexican government wants to have a database to track every cellphone number in the country (in Spanish, Google translation) and whom it belongs to. They want to tie in the CURP (Unique Registration Population Code in Spanish, like the Social Security Number in the US) with cellphone numbers. If Mexicans don’t send in their number and CURP via SMS before April 10, 2010, their cellphone number will be blocked. The new law was published back in February and is going into effect now.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Mexican Government To Document Cell Phone Use | tags: cell phone, database, google, Phone, security | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
Afforess writes “‘Proxy servers are an everyday part of Internet surfing. But using one in a crime could soon lead to more time in the clink,’ reports the Associated Press. The new federal rules would make the use of proxy servers count as ‘sophistication’ in a crime, leading to 25% longer jail sentences. Privacy advocates complain this will disincentivize privacy and anonymity online. ‘[The government is telling people] … if you take normal steps to protect your privacy, we’re going to view you as a more sophisticated criminal,’ writes the Center for Democracy and Technology. Others fear this may lead to ‘cruel and unusual punishments’ as Internet and cell phone providers often use proxies without users’ knowledge to reroute Internet traffic. This may also ultimately harm corporations when employees abuse VPN’s, as they too are counted as a ‘proxy’ in the new legislation. TOR, a common Internet anonymizer, is also targeted in the new legislation. Some analysts believe this legislation is an effort to stop leaked US Government information from reaching outside sources, such as Wikileaks. The legislation (PDF, the proposed amendment is on pages 5-15) will be voted on by the United States Sentencing Commission on April 15, and is set to take effect on November 1st. The EFF has already urged the Commission to reject the amendment.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Using Net Proxies Will Lead To Harsher Sentences | tags: cell phone, google, Phone, privacy, technology | posted in technical news
Apr
14
2009
You need to take the time to read the warrant available via PDF. Insanity. Someone’s computer crashes and suspects it’s a CS student’s fault because he does things like “‘jail breaks’ cell phones” and he is sometimes seen with a “[computer with] a black screen with white font which he uses prompt commands on.” Yikes.
Comments Off on Typing "Prompt Commands" Sufficient to Seize Your Property | tags: cell phone, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
10
2009
megamerican alerted us to a leaked document (PDF) from a Virginia Fusion Center titled “2009 Virginia Terrorism Threat Assessment.” The document is marked as “Law Enforcement Sensitive,” not to be shown to public. Citizens for Legitimate Government has a write-up. Slashdot gets a mention on page 45 — not as a terrorist organization itself, but as one of the places that member of Anonymous may hang out: “A ‘loose coalition of Internet denizens,’ Anonymous consists largely of users from multiple internet sites such as 4chan, 711chan, 420chan, Something Awful, Fark, Encyclopedia Dramatica, Slashdot, IRC channels, and YouTube. Other social networking sites are also utilized to mobilize physical protests. … Anonymous is of interest not only because of the sentiments expressed by affiliates and their potential for physical protest, but because they have innovated the use of e-protests and mobilization. Given the lack of a unifying creed, this movement has the potential to inspire lone wolf behavior in the cyber realms.” According to the report, cell phones and digital music players have been used to transfer plans related to criminal activity, and therefore presumably could be grounds for suspicion. Podcasting is also suspicious.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Slashdot Mentioned In Virginia Terrorism Report | tags: cell phone, google, network, networking, news, Phone, youtube | posted in technical news
Apr
9
2009
georgewilliamherbert writes “Multiple news reports, mailing list posts, blogs, and tweets are pointing out two overnight acts of sabotage in the San Francisco Bay area, with long distance fiber network cables being cut in two locations in the early morning hours. The first cut, around 1:30 AM, affecting landline and cell phone service and 911 calls in the communities of Morgan Hill, Gilroy, and parts of Santa Cruz counties, was on an AT&T fiber alongside Monterey Highway near Blossom Hill Road, in San Jose. A second cut, around 3:30 AM, in San Carlos, affected Sprint fiber and has significantly disrupted services at the 200 Paul datacenter in southern San Francisco. Rumor says that this may be related to a AT&T communications workers contract having just expired — but no evidence has been published yet in the media, and this could be an intentional act of sabotage by someone unrelated to the company’s workers.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Multiple Fiber Cuts In San Francisco Area | tags: cell phone, google, network, news, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
5
2009
walrabbit writes “Wang et al (2009) (from Albert-László Barabási’s lab) modeled the spread of mobile phone viruses based on anonymised call and text logs of 6.2 million customers spread over 10,000 towers. Their simulations shows that the spread is dependent on the market share of a particular handset, human mobility and mode of spread: bluetooth or MMS or hybrid. ‘We find that while Bluetooth viruses can reach all susceptible handsets with time, they spread slowly due to human mobility, offering ample opportunities to deploy antiviral software. In contrast, viruses utilizing multimedia messaging services could infect all users in hours, but currently a phase transition on the underlying call graph limits them to only a small fraction of the susceptible users. These results explain the lack of a major mobile virus breakout so far and predict that once a mobile operating system’s market share reaches the phase transition point, viruses will pose a serious threat to mobile communications.’ You can read the full text (PDF) and supporting online information (PDF) (with interesting modelling data and diagrams).” (Also summed up in a short article at CBC.)
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Pinning Down the Spread of Cell Phone Viruses | tags: cell phone, google, mobile, Phone, virus | posted in technical news
Apr
3
2009
OLPCs are a great idea, but it’s the cell phone that’s really changing the developing world.
Comments Off on One Cell Phone Per Child | tags: cell phone, OLPC, Phone | posted in technical news
Apr
3
2009
Hugh Pickens writes “A Pew study last year found that only 38 percent of rural American homes have access to broadband Internet, compared to 57 percent in cities and 60 percent in the suburbs. All that could be about to change with the announcement that Verizon plans to start introducing a new wireless network in the 700 MHz spectrum in 2010. ‘The licenses we bought in the 700MHz auction cover the whole US,’ says Tony Melone, a Verizon Wireless VP. ‘And we plan to roll out LTE [high-speed mobile service] throughout the entire country, including places where we don’t offer our [current] cell phone service today.’ Because the [700 MHz] spectrum is in a lower frequency, it can transmit signals over longer distances and penetrate through obstacles, and because the signals travel longer distances, Verizon can deploy fewer cell towers than if it used spectrum from a higher frequency band, which means it can provide coverage at a lower cost. President Obama’s administration is well aware of the high-speed Internet divide that exists today, and as part of the overall economic stimulus package passed by Congress, the government is allocating .2 billion for projects that bring broadband Internet access to rural towns and communities.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Verizon Promises 4G Wireless For Rural America | tags: cell phone, google, mobile, network, news, obama, Phone, wireless | posted in technical news
Apr
3
2009
Everybody loves the idea of cheap VoIP calls on cell phones. Everybody, that is, except for wireless carriers who charge usurious fees for voice and data plans. Cellular providers around the globe are placing restrictions on Skype for iPhone and other Internet phone services, and that’s bad news for consumers.
Comments Off on Wireless Carriers Are Wrong to Cripple Skype for iPhone | tags: cell phone, consumers, iphone, news, Phone, wireless | posted in technical news
Mar
31
2009
Following up on the “sexting” case we’ve discussed in recent days, oliphaunt sends word from the Times-Tribune that a New Jersey federal judge has ordered the prosecutor not to file charges in the cases of three teenage girls whose cell phones were confiscated. “Wyoming [NJ] County District Attorney George Skumanick Jr. cannot charge three teenage girls who appeared in photographs seminude traded by classmates last year, a judge ruled Monday. US District Judge James M. Munley granted a request by the American Civil Liberties Union to temporarily stop Mr. Skumanick from filing felony charges against the Tunkhannock Area School District students.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on ACLU Wins, No Sexting Charges For NJ Teens | tags: cell phone, google, Phone | posted in technical news