AT&T tells customers using unauthorized tethering methods to pay up or stop

Been using an app like MyWi to enable tethering on your jailbroken iPhone? Then there’s a good chance you’ve already received a message like the one above from AT&T, or perhaps an email like the one after the break. By all accounts, the carrier is now cracking down on all unauthorized tethering, and it’s asking folks engaged in such behavior to either pay up for a proper tethering plan or simply stop tethering altogether — if it doesn’t hear anything back for you after sending the message, AT&T says it will automatically enroll you in a DataPro 4GB tethering plan (at a rate of $45 a month). We should note that all the reports we’ve seen so far are from iPhone users, although that certainly doesn’t mean Android users will simply be allowed to slip by unnoticed. Exactly how AT&T is identifying users isn’t clear, however, and we could well just be seeing the beginning of a cat and mouse game as folks try to discover workarounds to go undetected. More on this one as we get it.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading AT&T tells customers using unauthorized tethering methods to pay up or stop

AT&T tells customers using unauthorized tethering methods to pay up or stop originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 18 Mar 2011 10:52:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone 5 NFC Rumors Persist

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Rumors that the forthcoming version of the iPhone will sport Near Field Communication (NFC) technology are back, after being shot down by a number of sites, earlier in the week.

Of course, we’re still a ways from a formal announcement for the handset (that will most likely come in the early summer months), so fittingly, the current batch of rumors are third-hand. Forbes is citing an “entrepreneur who is working on a top-secret NFC product” who is in turn citing “a friend who works at Apple.”

It wouldn’t be a shock, of course, were Apple to offer such a technology on the new iPhone–and Steve Jobs would, no doubt, present such a feature as though his company invented it. Google, as present, is pushing the mobile payment technology, having backed in the latest version of Android.

The technology gives users a simple way to make payments via their handsets without actually touching the phone to a retail terminal. 

Apple and Android get drafted, soldier-centric Army apps coming soon

If we referred to an Apple or Android army, you might assume we’re talking about a legion of brand-loyal fanboys, with which most Engadget commenters are intimately familiar. Defense contractors, however, are trying to turn the US Army into a lethal Apple / Android force with soldier-centric apps. Harris Corp. has a tablet app in the works that allows soldiers to control IP cameras on UAVs for more pertinent intel on the ground while simultaneously sending that information to command centers anywhere in the world. Meanwhile, Intelligent Software Solutions aims to bring mapping mashups to the battlefield (no purpose-built device needed) with an app that combines smartphones’ geolocation with historical data to show troops what’s been going down in the area — from IED explosions to insurgent arrests. Best of all, these apps lower training costs since most warriors are already fluent in Android or iOS and the consumer handhelds can be cheaply ruggedized to replace the more robust $10,000 units in the field today. Should protective measures fail, the devices’ (relatively) low replacement cost makes them “almost disposable.”

Apple and Android get drafted, soldier-centric Army apps coming soon originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 17 Mar 2011 02:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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iPhone Personal Hotspot transmitting GPS information to tethered iPads?

You may not have known this, but besides missing a 3G radio, the WiFi-only iPad also lacks the A-GPS chip that enables exact GPS positioning versus less-accurate WiFi triangulation. Well, according to Tablet Monsters, if you’ve got an iPhone with iOS 4.3 and are subscribed to Personal Hotspot, your shiny slate should be able to tap into the GPS chip of it’s smaller-screened family member. Reports in the MacRumors forums confirm that people are indeed seeing this added functionality on both iPad 2 and the original. Though the native Maps app is reportedly working perfectly there’s talk of unfriendliness in turn-by-turn GPS apps — though this could have to do with the refresh rate of the transmission. If you’re already shelling out for the Personal Hotspot plan this is a nice added bonus, and makes the choice between the 3G iPad and the WiFi one just a little bit easier — assuming you’ve got an iPhone of course. Still skeptical? Check out a video of it in action after the break.

Continue reading iPhone Personal Hotspot transmitting GPS information to tethered iPads?

iPhone Personal Hotspot transmitting GPS information to tethered iPads? originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Mar 2011 20:16:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Web apps found to be lacking Safari’s speed bump in iOS 4.3

Well, it looks like you weren’t imagining things if you thought in-app browsers or web apps saved to your iPhone’s home screen seemed slower than Safari itself. Ars Technica has now confirmed that pages or web apps loaded using those methods aren’t receiving the JavaScript boost added to Safari in iOS 4.3, which the site found to be about 2.5 times faster than Safari in iOS 4.2. The problem is that those apps don’t have the necessary permissions to execute dynamically generated native code stored in writeable memory (as Safari does), which basically leaves them running at the same speed they did in iOS 4.2. Not surprisingly, that has prompted some to speculate that it’s all part of a grand plan on Apple’s part to force developers to use full-fledged apps instead of mobile apps, but Ars Technica points out that it could just as easily be due to some technical problems. Hit up the source link below for all the technical details.

Web apps found to be lacking Safari’s speed bump in iOS 4.3 originally appeared on Engadget on Wed, 16 Mar 2011 17:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

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Hacking Competition Leaves Android and Windows Phone 7 Devices Undefeated

The Nexus S is the Android phone target in the 2011 Pwn2Own competition.

From the results of the Pwn2Own hacking competition, it looks like Android and Windows Phone 7 are tough nuts to crack.

It took only two days for hackers to crack into the Apple and Blackberry operating systems during the three-day Pwn2Own tournament last week, while Android and Windows Phone 7 models were abandoned and left unhacked by the end of the contest.

Is this because their operating systems are more secure? Yes and no.

“The survival of a target at Pwn2Own does not automatically declare it safer than a target that went down,” last year’s Internet Explorer Pwn2Own winner Peter Vreugdenhil cautions. The contestants who were lined up to beat the Android and WP7 devices in the competition withdrew for a variety of reasons.

Pwn2Own, now in its fifth year, is a hacking competition divided into two areas: web browsers and mobile phones.

This year, Microsoft Internet Explorer 8, Apple Safari 5.0.3, Mozilla Firefox, and Google Chrome were the web-browser targets. In the mobile phone category, the Dell Venue Pro (Windows Phone 7), Apple iPhone 4 (iOS), BlackBerry Torch 9800 (Blackberry 6) and Nexus S (Android) were targeted. The OS and browser versions were frozen last week (so for example, Apple’s Safari 5.0.4 update was not used), ensuring that all contestants are working on the same version of each OS.

Pwning and owning occurs if the hacker defeats the frozen version. If the exploit they used still exists in the current firmware, they are also eligible to receive a monetary prize. The 2011 Pwn2Own competition ran March 9 to 11.

Vreugdenhil says many different factors determine how hard a target is to hack. There’s the safety of the software itself, the exploit mitigations that are already in place for that software, and then the amount of research that has already been conducted (which can speed up the process of writing an actual exploit).

Firefox and Chrome web browsers were also left undefeated because contestants withdrew from Pwn2Own.

“Chrome has the advantages of having multiple exploit-mitigation techniques that certainly make it more difficult to hack. As for Android, we see no particular reason why Android would be harder to hack than one of the other targets.”

Safari, Chrome, iPhone, Android and Blackberry all use WebKit in their browsers, which means that they are all susceptible to exploitation through the browser — and that’s exactly how the iPhone and Blackberry were attacked.

Charlie Miller, a Pwn2Own veteran, worked with Dion Blazakis to hack the iPhone 4 in this year’s competition using a flaw in its Mobile Safari Web browser and a “specially-crafted webpage.” A team of 3 (Vincenzo Iozzo, Willem Pinckaers, and Ralf Philipp Weinmenn) defeated the BlackBerry Torch using a similar technique.

So what did the contest’s organizers think of the outcome of 2011’s Pwn2Own?

Vreugdenhil and other organizers were not surprised that the iPhone went down quickly. It has been a major target and a lot of research has already been done on that platform.

Android’s survival was a bit of a surprise, since it is also a big target and had four contestants lined up.

Although no device is unhackable, some factors contribute to a safer product. For those that are out to find the safest phone on the market, Vreugdenhil says you’ll want to compare features such as DEP (Data Execution Prevention), ASLR (address space layout randomization), Sandboxing, code signing and the ease with which software can be updated on the device.

Pwn2Own Day 2 [Ars Technica]


Verizon May Have 10 Percent of U.S. iPhone Market

Apple's iPhone 4 became available on the Verizon network in February. Photo: Jon Snyder/Wired.com

The iPhone appears to be gaining serious momentum on the Verizon network after just one month on the market.

About 10 percent of iPhone customers in the United States could be on Verizon, according to estimates by mobile advertisement firm Chitika.

If that estimate is accurate, it signifies rapid growth of the iPhone on Verizon. The Verizon iPhone went on sale online Feb. 3 for pre-orders, and the handset hit stores Feb. 10, ending AT&T’s exclusive partnership with Apple.

“For Verizon to pick up that big of a share of iPhone users in about a month is impressive, and doesn’t bode particularly well for AT&T,” Chitika said in a blog post.

Chitika has been using a live tracker to monitor web usage of iPhones on the Verizon and AT&T networks, based on activity of websites running ads on Chitika’s network.

The live tracker on Tuesday peaked at 12.7 percent of iPhones surfing the web on the Verizon network. As of Wednesday morning, the tracker shows 9.4 percent of iPhones are on Verizon. The results are based on 700,000 impressions from Chitika’s network.

“The spike is really interesting to me,” said Daniel Ruby, research director of Chitika, in an e-mail to Wired.com. “I’m trying to figure out if it’s indicative of a different usage pattern between AT&T and Verizon users, or if it was just a spike in Verizon usage across our network.”

Though Chitika believes the data presents a problem for AT&T, AT&T has said it’s not worried about iPhone customers switching over to Verizon.

AT&T previously told investors that it was confident iPhone profits would remain strong because many customers were on family plans and corporate plans, which would make it difficult to transition to a different network.

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Apple iPad 2 and iPhone 4 Display Shoot-Out [Apple]

Dr. Raymond Soneira of DisplayMate Technologies has made it his mission to suss out the best smartphone, tablet, HDTV, and multimedia displays from the worst with his Display Technology Shoot-Out series. Here, he tackles the differences between iPad 2 and iPhone 4 screens. More »

Verizon Models Now Around 12% of iPhone Market – Report

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A month after launch the Verizon iPhone now comprises around 12 percent of Apple handsets currently in use (the number is fluctuating between 12.7 and 10.4 percent) , according to new numbers from analytics firm Chitika Insights.

The numbers are pulled from data gathered by the Chitika ad network, collected over a 24 hour period. The firm put Verizon’s share of the market at around three percent of the market a day after the phone was launched. 
Not quite the apocalyptic numbers for AT&T that many expected, but still, a fairly impressive gain in a fairly short period of time, particularly given the fact that the iPhone 4 was already six months old by the time the device debuted on Verizon.

Does Tethered iPhone Send GPS to Wi-Fi iPad?

Can the iPad 2 suck GPS info from the iPhone 4?

When Kyle Carmitchel fired up his Wi-Fi only iPad 2 to check his route on a road-trip, he was amazed to see that it was tracking his position on the map using proper, works-in-the-middle-of-nowhere GPS. Kyle was pulling in his iPhone 4’s data connection via wireless tether, and it appears that the iPhone was also sending GPS info to the iPad.

Only 3G iPads have a GPS chip inside, so Kyle says that his Wi-Fi only model was being fed the more accurate data from the iPhone. Wi-Fi iPad and iPod Touches can work out where they are thanks to hotspot triangulation, and they will even track you as you move, but Kyle is convinced that he was getting the real thing:

The location I’m getting on my Wi-Fi only iPad is most certainly not this. It is clear I am being fed GPS information from the phone, at what appears to be an interval of once a minute or so between refreshes (likely they didn’t do real time updating so as to go easy on the phone’s battery).

And because the Wi-Fi iPad 2 has a compass inside, this works, too.

If true, this is a great hidden feature, and makes the combination of iPhone and non-3G iPad more compelling. I have heard that a lot of people are planning on just this combo. I think that they may be disappointed. I used an iPod Touch with a MiFi hotspot for a while and found it to be a huge pain.

With the 3G iPad, you are always connected, and quickly checking your mail is easy. With hotspots, you need to activate them, wait for connection and then juggle the hardware in your hands. It is clunky, and far from ideal. If you almost never leave the house, though, maybe you’ll be happy. But then, if you never leave the house, why do you even have an iPhone?

Video: Wi-Fi Only iPad 2 GPS Navigation [Tablet Monsters via Cult of Mac]

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