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Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPad. Show all posts

Thursday, 21 July 2011

Apple's record sales and profits continues


Apple’s awesome journey continues. iPhone and iPad sales more than doubled. Over 20 million iphones got sold in Apple’s fiscal quarter which ended on 25th June with 142% growth than last year and drives $13.3 billion revenue, close to half of the $28.5 billion revenues in total for the whole company. iPads did remarkably well with over 9 million units got sold and registered 183% growth in sales and brought $6 billion revenue for the company.





Steve Jobs describes this fiscal quarter as "best quarter ever."

iPods posted revenue of $5 billion with 7.5 million units selling and iTunes posted revenue of $1.4 billion.

Apple's net profit was a record breaking $7.31 billion, up from last year’s $3.25 billion in the same period with an impressive 125% increase. Apple’s revenue reached to $28.57 billion, up from $15.7 billion in the same quarter last year at 82% growth rate.



Saturday, 23 April 2011

Blocking Movement Tracking by iOS


It's common knowledge by now that your iOS device maintains a detailed log of your movements. This issue is not really new; it has been around all along though not very many have been aware of it.

iOS has always offered location services - pinpointing a user's location using Cell-ID and Wi-Fi hotspots. Earlier devices relied on Google and Skyhook databases for the purpose. Starting from  iOS 3.2, Apple has been building up their own database of location data. This data is anonimized and sent over an encrypted channel.

But the real problem is not with the collection of data by Apple but in the implementation of the idea.

The problem is that an encrypted file (named consolidated.db) on the device stores a record of all the movements of a user;  that file is copied to any computer the user may have synced the device with and any backups may have been made by the user.

Anyone getting access to the encrypted data file either from the device itself ofr by hacking the device that contains a copy of the file, can easily extract a log of a user's whereabouts over the last year.

The location logging by these devices (iPhones and 3G iPads) was publicised by Alex Levinson  and some others just as early as last year though it wasn’t really a secret;  it has always been mentioned in the Terms and Conditions of sale though the relevant clauses were never conspicuously visible.

There is, however, an application called "Untrackerd"  (not authorised by Apple, of course!)  which can be used on "unlocked" Apple devices. The more sensible thing, however, would be for Apple to give an option to users in the matter of having their movements logged or at least to make it impossible for anyone to access the data collected.