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De nombreuses entreprises dont Apple militent pour empรชcher des รฉtats amรฉricains de promulguer une loi en faveur du droit ร la rรฉparation. Une dรฉmarche ร l'encontre des arguments รฉcolos que la marque promeut lors de ses confรฉrences.
In theory, this is part of why app stores are useful. Users afraid of being scammed on the open web can browse the Mac App Store with confidence, knowing that Appleโs walled garden will protect them.
Except it wonโt.
Apple Inc. lost a ruling at Germanyโs top civil court over a patent for unlocking smartphones with a finger swipe.
Iโve had my first-generation iPad for about four yearsโit was given to me by a friend who after buying it didnโt use it much. I use it nearly every day, chiefly for streaming Netflix videos and surfing the Web. It has held up fantastically: the battery life is still great, the screen is as bright and blemish-free as the day I got it, the displayโs touch capabilities havenโt diminished, and it still feels reasonably fast (though, according to Apple, the new iPad is 12 times as speedy).
And why do we believe them?
* Because we can read the source code and the protocol descriptions ourselves, and determine just how secure they are?
* Because they're a big company and big companies never lie?
* Because they've implemented it in proprietary binary software, and proprietary crypto is always stronger than the company claims it to be?
* Because they can't covertly send your device updated software that would change all these promises, for a targeted individual, or on a mass basis?
* Because you will never agree to upgrade the software on your device, ever, no matter how often they send you updates?
* Because this first release of their encryption software has no security bugs, so you will never need to upgrade it to retain your privacy?
* Because if a future update INSERTS privacy or security bugs, we will surely be able to distinguish these updates from future updates that FIX privacy or security bugs?
* Because if they change their mind and decide to lessen our privacy for their convenience, or by secret government edict, they will be sure to let us know?
* Because they have worked hard for years to prevent you from upgrading the software that runs on their devices so that YOU can choose it and control it instead of them?
* Because the US export control bureacracy would never try to stop Apple from selling secure mass market proprietary encryption products across the border?
* Because the countries that wouldn't let Blackberry sell phones that communicate securely with your own corporate servers, will of course let Apple sell whatever high security non-tappable devices it wants to?
* Because we're apple fanboys and the company can do no wrong?
* Because they want to help the terrorists win?
* Because NSA made them mad once, therefore they are on the side of the public against NSA?
* Because it's always better to wiretap people after you convince them that they are perfectly secure, so they'll spill all their best secrets?
There must be some other reason, I'm just having trouble thinking of it.
Now-a-days, Apple is famous in the markets because its new iPhone 5S has a Fingerprint Sensor (Touch ID) as a security featureโeveryone is getting amazed with that feature and eager to use.
That Fingerprint scanner has been hacked already by German Hackers group โCCCโ but one more thing to concern about thatโโwill Apple share that Fingerprint database with NSAโ and the answer is YES.
Itโs not a secret we love robots here at BLR, so we wanted them to be the heroes in our latest promo clip. Luxury cars with powerful engines to drive through roads under severe speed restrictions, cable TV that allows us to pay to watch all kind of sports, all from our comfortable sofa, and of course, hyper expensive cell phones that do almost everything but making a decent phone call.
Yes, our happiness is based on things we donโt need and governed by entities we donโt control, so what? Sit down and turn on the tv!
The robots were taken from real Japanese robot model kits, and they now hold a privileged position in our freak museum. The bad guy spits real smoke out of its mouth! The environment is made of cardboard houses that were integrated with the help of camera tweaks. It all serves to the purpose of creating a dumb homogeneous atmosphere in which weโre defined by what weโve got, that is, the same lame things.
Nous avions รฉtรฉ intriguรฉs en consultant le programme du congrรจs du Club des directeurs de sรฉcuritรฉ des entreprises (CDSE), qui s'est tenu jeudi ร Paris. Le document promettait en effet une "dรฉmonstration sur les capacitรฉs de cyberattaque par un reprรฉsentant de la DCRI", le service de renseignement intรฉrieur franรงais. Nous n'avons pas hรฉsitรฉ une seconde : nous y sommes allรฉs. Et nous n'avons pas รฉtรฉ dรฉรงus.
"The Apple iMessage protocol has been shrouded in secrecy for years now, but a pair of security researchers have reverse-engineered the protocol [original analysis] and found that Apple controls the encryption key infrastructure for the system and therefore has the ability to read users' text messagesโor decrypt them and hand them over at the order of a government agency. ... The researchers found that while that basic framework makes sense from a security point of view, there are a number of issues with the iMessage system. One major issue is that Apple itself controls the encryption key infrastructure use for iMessage, and has the keys for each individual user. The upshot of this is that Apple has the ability to read users' messages if it so chooses. The researchers who looked at iMessage, known as Pod2g and GG, said that there is no evidence that Apple is in fact reading users' iMessages, but it's possible that the company could. Users' AppleID passwords also are sent in clear text to the Apple servers."
La vie avec le fondateur d'Apple n'avait rien d'un fleuve tranquille, raconte Chrisann Brennan, dans ses mรฉmoires, The Bite in the Apple: A Memoir of My Life With Steve Jobs. Les droits initiaux ont รฉtรฉ vendus au New York Post, le tabloรฏd de Rupert Murdoch, qui s'est fait un plaisir d'en fait paraรฎtre quelques extraits. C'est que Brennan a partage quelques annรฉes de sa vie avec Jobs. Un fameux sacerdoce.
Forget the debate around the security or insecurity of the iPhone 5sโs fingerprint reader. The latest version of the iPhoneโs operating system currently offers a gaping hole in its old-fashioned passcode lockscreen.
Today my MacBook Air is one year old. That's not exactly an officially recognized holiday, but it does mean one thing very cool:
I have one year of data on my laptop battery, recorded every 1 minute of computer usage!
Lโannonce du nouvel iPhone dโApple fait dโun lancement de produit un รฉvรจnement trรจs important pour le gรฉant de la technologie. Comme attendu, le nouvel iPhone est plus rapide, plus puissant, et continue de masquer les nombreuses limitations imposรฉes ร lโutilisateur derriรจre une interface graphique sรฉduisante. ร chaque sortie dโun produit ou dโun systรจme dโexploitation, Apple nous offre ce quโil y a de meilleur et de plus innovant, y compris des technologies de gestion des droits numรฉriques (DRM) toujours plus fortes.
Apple a dรฉposรฉ hier en Australie le mot "startup" comme marque. Reste ร faire valider ce dรฉpรดt, รฉgalement fait aux Etats-Unis il y a deux ans et toujours en instance.
Jโaime pas trop taper sur ceux qui diffusent de lโinfo en gรฉnรฉral. Pas par corporatisme (haha), juste parce que je me dis que les lecteurs sont grands, ils doivent bien voir quand une info est biaisรฉe, incomplรจte ou tout simplement fausse. Mais quand je vois quโen quatre jours on a eu trois cas dโรฉcole, repris par autant de boรฎtes dont lโinfo est le mรฉtier, sans vรฉrifications aucunes et que la semaine nโest pas finieโฆ Je me dis quโon est pas dans la merde.
Tian Yu worked more than 12 hours a day, six days a week. She had to skip meals to do overtime. Then she threw herself from a fourth-floor window
L'hypothรจse est simple: le nouvel iOS opรฉrerait une sorte de censure en crรฉant une ยซkill listยป composรฉe de mots qu'il ne corrige pas. Michael Keller, contributeur du site, a trouvรฉ 14.000 mots que l'iPhone n'est pas en mesure de corriger malgrรฉ le fait qu'ils ne soient que trรจs lรฉgรจrement mal orthagraphiรฉs. La grande majoritรฉ de ces mots sont soit trรจs techniques soit trรจs rares.