Japanese I-Mode Phones Under Attack 148
radsoft.net is reporting that DoCoMo phones arre under attack by new wormish i-mode attachments. According to the announcement, i-mode phone users shouldn't open emails from unknown senders. I used a docomo phone while I was in Japan a few weeks ago. They are so far ahead of us in phones: lighter, cooler, longer battery life, more features, and i-mode is cool. Anyway, the funny part is that these attachments, if opened, will do nifty things like call arbitrary phone numbers (your worst enemy? Emergency?) or simply freeze your phone. Docomo has market penetration that makes local cel phone mega corps look like mom and pop shops. Anyway, there's no doubt that consumer electronics will be targets of more attacks in the future.
iMode is HTML! (Score:1)
Re:it's not like this wasn't expected... (Score:1)
With computers are everywhere now, and everything getting connected to a net or another soon, the possibilities are quite large.
More technology is more fun!
Actually not a strange idea at all. (Score:1)
wrong way round (Score:1)
Re:Cell phone viruses (Score:2)
Yeah, we did that. Let's see. "Is your refridgerator running?" "Do you have Prince Albert in a can?"
Re:Docomo/Microsoft parallax? (Score:5)
That's a bad analogy. The reason that NTT are in the position of market dominance that they now enjoy is because they were a government-sanctioned monopoly. You literally could not compete with NTT, if you did, you would eventually be arrested. The law stated that NTT were the only people permitted to run a telco, and that was that.
Say what you like about Microsoft, but they achieved market dominance by competing in a free market. Linux is a viable alternative for many applications, you are free to distribute and use it as you please. Neither Microsoft nor the government are in any way able to enforce that you do otherwise - in fact there's this little thing called the Constitution that protects you.
So, really, the situation isn't similar at all.
Re:Uhm, isn't this just common sense? (Score:1)
Huh?
I get e-mail every day from folks I don't know. Mostly folks asking for support for my FTP server, but also from people looking for people with my name, asking for advice on things that they may have seen me post in mailing lists on, and so on.
Oh well, I guess you listened your mommy told you not to talk to strangers.
Re:Cell Towers in Texas (Score:1)
But that's actually just another example of how the cell size in Texas is so large.
In Japan, you never see the cell towers becuase they don't really tower very much. They're just little transcievers that sit on the tops of buildings, almost completely out of sight. You don't need to build massive towers because you're only transmitting very short distances.
Because a Texas tower is designed to serve an area many miles across, you need a big tower to do it.
why japanese phones are better (Score:5)
Optimal cell size is a function of population density. In the Tokyo area, you've got about a billion people per square foot, so you can afford to keep the cell size small, which means you don't need a lot of power to transmit.
If you were to try to use the same cell size in a place like Texas, you'd be putting up more cell towers than there are people. It's just not economically feasable to do that.
Americans want phones they can take anywhere in the country and have them work. They need a big battery and a high power transmitter to make that work.
Here in the building where I work in Ibaraki-prefecture there's almost no cell coverage because we're a government lab (KEK [www.kek.jp]) and you can't place a cell tower on government property according to Japanese law. People have to run to the roof whenever their cell phone rings. The lab isn't that big, either. It' can't me much more than a couple of square kilometers. Once you get off the lab, your phone works pretty much everywhere.
Don't expect to see Japan-sized phones in the U.S. any time soon. We need a ten-fold increase in population density before it will become practical.
Re:Punch cards rule (Score:1)
It's not that they were clever enough to "bypass" stuff that we weren't... Around, oh, the end of World War II, we had such a head start on everyone that in many areas other nations didn't catch up until recently (and some still haven't). And, well, damn. If the going tech when they caught up was fiber optics, and not copper, of course they're gonna start with fiber and leapfrog us a bit, because we're kinda stuck using the network we started building a long time ago and rely upon.
The other point the thread originator made was equally valid... You'll note that damn near everyone has a phone (and it's extraordinarily reliable), and we've managed to do some ridiculously cool things on a network that was originally designed to simply connect telephone A to telephone B.
Re:And Now a Word About Infrastructure (Score:1)
I've been unable to get a call through (despite having a functional line) exactly once, and it was just after a hurricane. When nearly every person in a city tries to place or answer a phone call at the same time, yeah, the grid gets overloaded...
Blackouts are a non-issue, because the phone circuit carries its own power.
In short, next time an earthquake or hurricane hits your part of Sweden, try calling a few friends. :)
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:1)
Roughly nobody wants to browse the web on their phone... maybe they would if the displays didn't suck, but I suspect most people would be more interested in a smaller phone than in a better display.
This kind of sucks, because I wouldn't mind being able to write java apps for my phone. ;)
Re:And Now a Word About Infrastructure (Score:2)
The latter, they're very good at. ;)
In terms of access and availability, I don't think I've ever been anywhere in the U.S. (aside from well within the confines of one or national parks) where I was more than a short walk from a functional land line and handset. If I'm in anything resembling a populated area, I can promise you I'll have no trouble whatsoever finding a phone that is both accessible and available for my use. The last two times I've moved, I've had telephone service connected and functional within an hour.
If all this sounds familiar to you, then consider that the phrase "one of the best" may just include your Nation of Choice in "the best". Nobody claimed vast superiority over the entire world, here.
Re:Why do some techies never learn? (Score:2)
Re:Nightmare Time (Score:2)
Maybe in Japan, where the soda density is so much higher...
Oh good, another bunch of trusting fuckwits (Score:2)
I'll just bet that the next generation of GPRS and UMTS phones will be hacked to death because the manufacturers forgot about security.
Re:Excuse us Yanks for believing in a free market (Score:2)
Having different mobile telephone standards is like having different networking standards. On the Internet we all use TCP/IP. Feel free to go back to ipx/spx/banyan/netbeui/whatever archaic networking protocol you want.
In Europe, we all use GSM for our mobiles and soon, GPRS. Then once the telcos have paid off the loans for those rediculously large 3G licenses we might have a world wide standard in 50 years.
Re:Why do some techies never learn? (Score:2)
Re:Cell phone viruses (Score:2)
"No!"
"Then what do you do, go in your pants?"
Re:Why do some techies never learn? (Score:2)
Re:Funny - (Score:2)
Re:Excuse us Yanks for believing in a free market (Score:1)
I also have a Cingular GSM phone (for work), and though the little Nokia is nice, I don't see GSM giving me more features or better sound quality than any of the other systems out there.
From a user perspective, I really don't care if it's GSM or TDMA or XYZPDQ or whatever, I just care if I can make a call. Why all the worship of GSM? I still have yet to see a sound argument for it.
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:3)
Talk about market penetration!
Why do some techies never learn? (Score:5)
Re:Docomo/Microsoft parallax? (Score:1)
Purely superficial mktng 'innovative' BS.
Funny how all the skulduggery and backstabbing done by a ruthless, obsessively deranged boy genie-ass without a shread of ethic or conscious gets slowly forgotten - nevermind that Pertec purchased MITS with the understanding that they were buying MITS-BASIC (that's what the label says!), only to have the rights to BASIC returned to Micro-Soft due to a legal techinacality (hmm, no 'competitive market' choice there) - nevermind that IBM handed Msft a cash cow when Msft bought QDOS and flipped it to IBM for royalties ("Isn't that the kid who's mom is on our Red Cross committee" - nope, still no 'competition' going on). It also helps immensly to have a family of bankers and lawyers for lots of free dinner time advice that real innovators seldom enjoy.
No, only a Msft brainwashed, press release deluded revisionist-history adled mind can buy into the "won by competition in the marketplace" BS - instead of by quasi legal back room antics that would make embarrass a Rockefeller.
See the Bill Gates/Alfred E. Neuman comparison HERE [widomaker.com] or http://www.widomaker.com/~cswiger/bgisaen.html
DataFellows instead of McAfee (Score:1)
òò òó óò óó ôô õõ öö øø
BIG Brother is watching
\\ \/
Re:it's not like this wasn't expected... (Score:2)
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I hope we shall crush in its birth the aristocracy of our monied corporations
Re:Can't dial out from Java... (Score:1)
Re:Nightmare Time (Score:1)
Cell-loc [cell-loc.com] and TimesThree [timesthree.com] are building cell-phone positioning technology. This sort of thing will soon be availible to your ordinary cell phone carrier. The FCC is trying to make the cell carriers provide locations of cell phones for 911 purposes...
chilling, no?
Uhm, isn't this just common sense? (Score:1)
So, the whole point of this post is that a company who offers cell phone service is telling people not to read messages from people they don't know.
Brilliant.
Call me crazy, but, who the hell bothers to read mail from people they don't know? Especially if the subject line is screaming about MAKE MONEY FAST? This "warning" is like saying "Don't spray yourself in the face with pepper spray -- It may impair your ability to watch Carson Daly on TRL."
Chekov (Score:3)
Wrath of Khan.
Re:Docomo/Microsoft parallax? (Score:1)
Worse - DoCoMo charges for every email - Can you even *imagine* MS trying that?
MMDC.NET [mmdc.net]
Funny - (Score:5)
What a bad iDea *that* is... (Yes, it's already been exploited, though over here, I think it's 119, rather than 911...)
Someone made an innocent goof in a HTML-based game a few weeks ago that highlighted this vulnerability.
On top of that, it costs the *initiator* of the call for calls placed from cell phones here, not the recipient - what was that exchange in the Carribean that was supposed to be so bad - 809?
iMode is just untroducing Java on its phones, but from what i've read on the keitai-l listserve, auto-dialing like this is not on an option.
Cheers,
Jim in Tokyo
MMDC.NET [mmdc.net]
OT: Why does the US takes so long to get new tech? (Score:1)
Re:So wait.... (Score:2)
So, if a tree falls in the forest and nobody hears it, the sound is logged?
+1 Funny
-1 Offtopic
+1 Funny
-1 Redundant
+1 Underrated
-1 Flamebait
Kevin Fox
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Re:Nightmare Time (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot Worm - DoItYourselfOnTheHonorSystem (Score:1)
Re:Slashdot Worm - DoItYourselfOnTheHonorSystem (Score:1)
Re:I blame the Japanese script kiddies for this (Score:2)
Re:Now more than WAP can be dead (Score:2)
Court orders you to pay each person their 1 dollar back. Leaving you 54000000 in the hole.
Re:Worse than US companies? (Score:2)
Re:Nightmare Time (Score:1)
Actually, not really.
My father had his cell phone stolen a couple of years ago, and I was shocked that the company couldn't triangulate to track the thief.
I'm all for greater privacy (like not having video cameras up in every public place), but being able to find a mobile phone seems like a pretty useful function. Of course, with any technology, there is the potential for abuse (video cameras are good; surveilence of the general population is bad).
The technology itself isn't bad -- it's the people who abuse it.
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:1)
For corporations that can't even get their shit together and let you know whether you can get DSL, it's not surprising. One will tell you that you're able to, another will tell you that you're not.
Now, I don't completely understand what's involved in the infrastructure of building a new system nationwide, but it can't be that easy.
In Europe, there are countries in close proximity with eachother. Most of those countries have quite a few mobile service providers. It's easier for them to cover a short space with new technology than it is for a "national" provider here to cover a country that is _very_ large. By the time they've completed, a country the size of Switzerland could have gone through a dozen iterations of new technology, no?
Hurm. (Score:5)
Extra calls to emergency call centers that flood the lines is going beyond just filling inboxes. Although I'm not familiar with the "110" emergency number stated in the article, if it's anything like 911, it could obviously affect lives. This seems to me to be far worse than a worm that calls numbers at random or freezes up the screen of a phone (also mentioned in the article).
According to Hollywood... (Score:2)
Rick
Re:According to Hollywood... (Score:2)
Phone home.... (Score:1)
Can't dial out from Java... (Score:1)
Java on these things is not a minus. It still has the same sandbox security model and runs in a protected environment so a rogue app can't really do a lot to you - it can't dial out and about all it can try is a DOS by consuming resources on your phone. Then you turn the phone off and on, and delete the noxious app (as it will not run until you tell it to).
I would never open some random binary attachemnt on a phone, but I'd feel safe enough downloading useful Java apps for a phone.
Re:Limitations of DoCoMo Java (Score:1)
The HTTP connection only being able to make connections back to the server seems more like an Applet than a MIDlet - I'm pretty sure in the Nokia contest I entered at JavaOne that HTTPConnection could get a connection to any service through the phone.
The second place entry was a MIDlet that used AltaVista to translate words (among other features). I suppose it could have been proxying through a local servlet but I did not think that was the case.
Also, all of the example applications of the CLDC configuration make no mention of the HTTPConnection being limited in such a fashion.
Thanks for the info!
Browser != Java VM bound app (Score:2)
As the browser built into the phone is just a binary application, it can do whatever it likes with the phone - send secret messages to aliens, wipe any flash ram you might have, randomize digits in stored phone numbers, or simply dial out when a WAP page you browse to asks it to. You can imagine that it was the first feature a marketing person thought would be handy to add to the built in browser.
Java apps on the other hand, have a limited API that defines what they can do - if there is no API to destroy the faceplate of the phone for example, a Java program (called "MIDlet" on phones using the MIDP Java API) will be unable to do so, no matter how hard they try. Similarily, at the moment I'm pretty sure (though I do not have exhaustive knowledge of the API) that there simply is no way for a Java app to ask the phone to dial a number. Already though developers are asking for such a capability - thus my original point about them probably adding in such a feature later on, but since the Java VM controls the actual action of dialing the number it can at least ask the user if they really want to dial a particular number and throw away repeated requests until the user responds.
That's why downloading a Java app might not be nearly as bad as browsing to some back-corner porn site on your phone that then made your phone call some of those great country codes that cost you hundreds of dollars per minute!
Re:why japanese phones are better (Score:1)
Re: Godzilla vs Hello Kitty (Score:1)
Re:it's not like this wasn't expected... (Score:1)
Umm, not it's not "inherent". Why should an attachment be able to automatically initiate a call without user intervention? What possible real-world advantage could this bring?
The answer, of course, is that allowing scripts to do anything is easy and putting sensible limits on them is (a little) harder. It's just laziness on the part of the developers.
There's a saying, I can't remember the source. "Unix doesn't prevent you from doing stupid things, because that would prevent you from doing clever things." But even in Unix a tiny amount of initial setup of permissions will greatly limit the number of stupid things you can do by accident.
Useful application (Score:1)
Just because something can have loads of security flaws doesn't mean it's not useful...
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Re:And Now a Word About Infrastructure (Score:3)
In the U.S.? Yeah, right, and I've got a moon plot to sell you.
Don't get me wrong, the U.S. isn't like a 3rd world country when it comes to its phone system. But I've heard enough complaints about US phone service to think it has to be at the bottom of a list of First world countries.
No offence. But your Telephone companies don't sell telephone service, they sell utter frustration.
Excellent Battery Life (Score:1)
Had to happen sooner or later (Score:1)
Re:Nightmare Time (Score:1)
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Re:why japanese phones are better (Score:1)
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Legal action? (Score:1)
DeCSS all over again. (Score:1)
Or they could admit their failure and fix the damn hole. These exploits are made as a wake-up to show the importance of security to the company as well as the consumer! Why can't they get over it and audit their system to prevent further exploits in the future and protect their customers!
Re:Why do some techies never learn? (Score:1)
Some terminals would let you reporgram enter and backspace.
Re:it's not like this wasn't expected... (Score:1)
Re:Cell phone worms... (Score:1)
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:1)
Europe needed GSM because of sill RF rules that prevent a German company from providing service in France. GSM was designed so that the cell sites are real tiny and their serivce borders are easy to control. Analog phones work much better once you get out of high density citites and into the rural areas. The US has some of the lowest density cities in the world. Heck even Australia has more dense cities than the US.
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:1)
Re:How long is the battery life anyway? (Score:1)
Worse than US companies? (Score:1)
DoCoMo has ~60% market share. While that may be higher than US's telcos, it's nothing like Microsft's.
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Re:Docomo/Microsoft parallax? (Score:1)
Not yet.. but they will soon enough with things like the DMCA.
Re:And Now a Word About Infrastructure (Score:1)
Re:OT: Why does the US takes so long to get new te (Score:1)
Cost? (Score:1)
Those things are fully available here -- just at $900 a pop, they aren't exactly in heavy demand.
blame Miss Cleo (Score:2)
Since the phone obviously dials numbers predefined, I say its a scam Miss Cleo concocted for her psych[o]ic network... "I see joor fuchah and eet says dat joo weel call me nouuw!"
The Dungeon (Score:4)
1-800-800-8900
FOR MEN WHO ARE SERIOUS ABOUT LEATHER AND THE FETISH LIFE STYLE
Microsoft..... (Score:1)
Re:I blame the Japanese script kiddies for this (Score:1)
--
Azrael - The Angel of Death
posted with: Mozilla (0.9+)
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:2)
Interesting comments, although way off base
The UK has one of the largest mobile usage rates in the world, and I would not call it sparsely populated! (~65m ppl in a country about 700x300 miles in size - including plenty of water). In fact it's (I believe) one of the highest population densities in the West.
There are 4 physical networks here, all national and all GSM, which means if you're on any of them you can call from pretty much anywhere in the world (yes I know there are issues with frequencies in some cases but with a modern phone you really don't notice it these days). The fact is that when GSM was emerging as a standard, the european telcos saw that standards were good, and interoperability was important, but the US nets decided on their own standards. Sound familiar?
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:3)
Here people get mobiles for free when they change their tires. You can pick up a mobile phone at the supermarket for about US 50 and then you have a Nokia 3210. The phone is equipped with a pre-paid card, so no subscription nescessary. Everytime your card is empty, you buy a new one, call a number and you go. Ease of use and cheapness. Here at the University we got phones for free from the University, with a subscription plan that is the cheapest I know. Sorry, you're argument is faulty.
Another point to be made is that in Europe, lane phone lines are hideously expensive. It makes more sense to use a cell phone there since it is cheaper (or close to it), but in the US this isn't true.
Sorry not true. We pay for local calls contrary to the US, but it is not too expensive and certainly cheaper then a mobile. On a side note, nobody gives up the land line they have, they just get the mobile as an extra. So they pay for two phones. Yet again you're arguing is flawed.
Sorry to say, but it seems that even though you're working in the industry, you don't know about the way it works here in Europe.
On a related note, somebody else mentioned that 4Europe was less densily populated and therefore there were more mobiles. Not true either, mobiles are used mostly in city areas and the London City or the business Center of Paris are great places to spot the latest Nokia. Fact of the matter is that the most densily populated countries like the Netherlands, but also the least densily populated countries, like the Scandinavian countries all have national coverage and a high usage rate. There is basically no excuse for American mobile phone companies other then that they made major errors in the pricing, the technology, the marketing, the regulations etc. They still haven't entered an incredibly large market.
Re:Cell phone worms... (Score:2)
I've always had the suspicion that virus creators are secretly supported by the anti-virus industry. There's this multi-billion dollar industry that depends on hackers in Eastern Europe and lame security in Microsoft products to create a problem that can never really be solved. That's suspicious.
Re:Funny - (Score:3)
But there still is some risk if there is a hole in the VM (A call that doesn't check the SecurityManager for instance) or if people just start clicking "Yes" on every security dialog that comes up :)
here's a image of it (Score:3)
It looks kinda geegawish to me. but then, i still use vi in xterms, so go figure.
Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:2)
I live in a small (pop 75,000) midwestern community which only has analog cell service provided by Cellular One or Verizon. That's it. Since the market is so small, it just doesn't pay to put up a new digital tower (Sprint PCS and the like) because they won't make any money. In many European countries and Japan, the population density is much greater (2-3x) and therefore it is more economical to provide the latest and greatest service.
On the other hand, I get my local and long distance phone service, 250 digital cable TV channels, and 1.5 MB/256k cable modem for just $100/month through a local provider. [blackhillsfiber.com] Guess I can't complain too loudly.
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And Now a Word About Infrastructure (Score:2)
Please remember, my American compatriots, that the reason why we are 'so far behind' in many telco issues is not because we are some bleating band of nincompoops, but rather that many other countries simply didn't have much in the way of infrastructure to begin with and when they installed, they installed modern digital because it was the prevailing technology.
Our telco infrastructure is much older, widely based on the old copper and analog systems, and we have to spend a lot of money to upgrade it to the modern stadards, unsurprisingly enough, because we still have one of the best telephone systems in the world in terms of access and availability for users. It's a shame that deregulation will probably destroy that.
Things a smurfy Smurf would smurf (Score:2)
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Re:why japanese phones are better (Score:3)
I can practically get a cell phone in the US the size of a stick of gum already. How much smaller do they need to be?
110 is 911. (Score:2)
On that note, there was a "911 Virus" [grc.com] that spread via open Windows shares and randomly called 911 last year. This didn't spread far because it was so malicious (it erased users' hard drives) but it is an example of this sort of thing happening. The Houston, TX police department got a large number of false calls.
Limitations of DoCoMo Java (Score:2)
Just to clarify (however belatedly), since I've been developing for DoCoMo's Java phones for the last few months...
You can do nothing to the phone itself from Java. You can't dial, you can't send E-mail (well, you can connect back to your server and have it send E-mail, but if you're going to spam from a server you don't need a phone), you can't connect to any remote site other than the one the program was downloaded from, you can't access the phone's memory / dial history / etc., you can't even run another Java app from inside yours (which is a major PITA since the maximum size of a JAR file is 10k). Moreover, the Docomo spec calls for the chip that implements the JVM to be physically separate from the chip(s) controlling the rest of the phone--obviously they're connected and all, but it certainly reduces the chance of a rogue Java program "accidentally" messing with main memory or such.
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BACKNEXTFINISHCANCEL
So wait.... (Score:4)
I can just see it... (Score:2)
Replacements will again have the appropriate messages coded in to say, "Stay in school so you can make more money to spend at shopping malls", "You need Barbie/GI Joe", "Be a consumer whore", "Watch TV until you have no concept of reality", "Get a gun, get several in fact, play with them" and of course "The government and Microsoft are your friends"
Gosh, I shudder at the consequences! Excuse me, now, the fridge told me I'm an idiot for not stocking up on Bud Light for the weekend, must go to store, must fill out card membership form divulging personal information, must stop reading slashdot, bad influence there...
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
Re:Not an issue in the USA for a long time (Score:2)
Consider most of the world's TV's were PAL and the US stuck with NTSC for decades, and will still have to support it for decades to come. It has much to do with the horserace of selling some new product and not worrying about better technology to come and how best to work with it. There's so much vested in the current standards and use of airwaves to easily change. I was greatly disappointed when I learned this back in 1992, that my US cell phone wouldn't work in Europe. I wanted to say, "Just who the heck is responsible for this fsck up!", but it was I, as I had endorsed the US standard by buying into it ignorantly. Be glad the IP protocol is the same the world over, the internet would still be a backwater if it had been done the same way.
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
Don't blame this on the Govt! Dammit! (Score:2)
Mobile phones have been around since the 50's (yeah, big radio phones, but the cellular idea is older than you think) and they had decades to come up with something intelligent and work with other companies in the world to establish a global standard, because, GASP!, it's about communication.
Never trust anyone who
-- .sig are belong to us!
All your
I blame the Japanese script kiddies for this (Score:5)
Re:Why do some techies never learn? (Score:2)
The whole idea of carrying around a fast ARM processor that I can't use for running applications is goofy.
Cell phone worms... (Score:2)
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Nightmare Time (Score:4)
"Please, you have to help us. My husband was just driving the car, when he passed out. I got the car stopped, but he's not breathing!"
"Ma'am, can you perform CPR on your husband?"
"I think so..."
"Okay, my computer can't tell where your cellphone is located, so I need you to tell me where you are so I can dispatch an ambulance."
"I'm on InterstaHAHAHA. Y04 F0n 4@s b33n H4XX0red! I AM L33t!!!"
Docomo/Microsoft parallax? (Score:2)
So, lets see, Docomo has incredible market penetration (to the nearly monopolistic level). And their products are under attack by viruses that target only their products and no one elses. (*cough*Outlook*cough*)
Does this sound like microsoft to anyone else?
Domoco should have expected this, given that they have such a similar situation to microsoft. Yes, the market is different (cells vs. software) but the context is similar.
Light years ahead of us in cell phones? (Score:4)
Lately I have had reason to be working with some DoCoMo information and it is scary. These phones track what you look at on-line, everything you buy and, with their nifty new multiple cell base triangulation automation, they keep track of where you are when you use your phone to surf or buy something.
And, unlike most annoying tracking and information compilation efforts we are subjected to constantly, this one is directly linked to you personally, not just to a demographic segment. DoCoMo keeps all of your personal information combined with your demographics in the sections of their server system called D-MAX and U-MAX.
DoCoMo touts all this as the birth of true one to one marketing and says that part of the beauty of this is that a great deal of information can be collected without the users knowledge.
They might be light years ahead of us in cell phone technology, but they are also light years ahead of us in marketing driven privacy invasion. And it is only going to get worse with the next generation of IMT-2000 phones, some of which will have GPS to nail down your location even further.
And for those who aren't aware, which I imagine is damned few in this venue, the underlying technology in the i502 series on is Java. This allows lots of cool stuff to be downloaded into your phone, but I guess they haven't worked out all the security kinks yet. Too bad to hear about that, since warts and all I like Java.
Cell phone viruses (Score:4)
This is called progress. =P
it's not like this wasn't expected... (Score:3)
Simply bad design (Score:2)
However, my relatively simple Samsung PCS phone with WAP support has the SAME ability to dial phone numbers from e-mails. Yet, it is not exploitable because it simply does this:
Dial 911?
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