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Comment Data mining by telcos (Score 3, Insightful) 108

Judging from the comments, quite a few of you are skeptical about the usefulness. I have a different perspective based on my work experience.

I used to work for a large telco in the APAC region (100s millions of users in multiple countries) where I was part of the team that developed a system to mine as much data as possible from users: location data (triangulation), call records, web data. From this data individual profiles were created which were then (only) sold in an aggregated/anonymized way (things might have changed of course). The tools we developed were licensed to telcos all over the world.

Analyzing DNS requests was definitely part of the arsenal of tools used for HTTPS requests (other techniques are connecting to the server and analyzing the certificate presented).

In my opinion, Firefox's DNS over HTTPS will at least partially help against this type of unwarranted snooping by telcos.

Comment Apple's business practices are shady at best (Score 4, Interesting) 71

I have a startup which builds a web-based enterprise product. A year ago we launched a companion app that provides a fraction of the functionality of the desktop application, just enough to help our customers extract the key information they need when they're on the road.

All of a sudden a few days Apple decides we have to implement in-app payments. I explained them that this is an enterprise product for an arcane industry and that our customers require quotations/invoices raised to their procurement department and would not pay several hundred to several thousand dollars through the app. They insist we have to implement in-app payments despite not helping our customers nor our business. We don't have automated billing at all, not even on our desktop product. The requested change means months of development for no value (at this point).

No way to appeal. We can currently not update our app and if we don't implement in-app payments in an unspecified time our current version will be pulled too.

Thanks, Apple.

Comment Unimpressed by DocuSign's handling of the breach (Score 5, Interesting) 20

I use DocuSign on a regular basis for work and have received over 20 fake emails in the last few days. These emails are particularly well drafted (as far as phishing emails go) and are easily mistaken with the real thing. DocuSign has yet to send out any warning message to its customers. Pretty poor handling from their part...

What they should *immediately* do is expire all passwords and force users to reset their password on next login.

Comment Re:Nexus 5X (Score 1) 31

I had the same issue with my Nexus 5X... like many others (https://ancillary-proxy.atarimworker.io?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcode.google.com%2Fp%2Fandroid%2Fissues%2Fdetail%3Fid%3D220971). After much discussion they finally replaced the device, but with one that is likely prone to the same issue (judging from the manufacturing date of the replacement device). In a few months I'll most likely experience the exact same issue, but then outside of the warranty period. Not cool!

Comment Re:Input devices (Score 1) 94

So, the 13" does have an AG (= anti-glare) version, but unfortunately this cannot be combined with i7, 16GB RAM or 1TB SSD. If you want these then they force you to take the high res glossy screen. Who thinks of these things??

I haven't seen the AG version yet, so cannot comment on how it compares with a real matte screen.

Comment Re:Never going to happen (Score 4, Informative) 137

> And that has been getting worse with the EU... not better.

Can you give me some examples? Our family business has been importing and exporting goods (motor vehicles) from all over Europe for over 40 years, and I can tell you that things have improved GREATLY because of the European union. Just to give you an idea, when the business just started a motor vehicle imported from for example Italy could not be registered in other European countries without making alterations because regulations were so different. In addition all the paperwork that was required would easily take up several hours per vehicle im/exported.

Comment XPrivacy (Score 1) 437

I'll update my Nexus 5 to Lollipop once XPrivacy (http://repo.xposed.info/module/biz.bokhorst.xprivacy) becomes available. XPrivacy is waiting for Xposed to add ART support to the framework.

Alternatively, I would consider installing Cyanogenmod 12 M1 (http://www.cyanogenmod.org/blog/the-l-is-for-lollipop) which has some of the same capabilities of restricting application permissions as XPrivacy (although less fine-grained).

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