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BuckNutty;1712719; said:
Quick question for anyone that knows...I have an 8gb 3g that is completely full. I'm down to 2 pages of apps because I have so much music is on it. When I upgrade and get a new iPhone will I still be able to use my old 3g as an iPod?


I'm doing the same with my 16 GB G3. Put it in airplane mode and you can still turn on wi-fi. It will prevent someone accidently using it to call 911... at least I hope as I'm planning on giving it to my 5-year old... Then again... that kid is an emergency waiting to happen. Not a bad idea afterall.
 
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You know what was a really smart plan? Making Gizmodo your enemy, after years of them worshiping even your foulest mistakes.

Apple's New Mobile Ad Terms Keep AdMob Out of iOS
How Apple Tricks You

The latter one is pretty mild, but major website exposure for all of your blunders and anti-trust movements can't be a positive thing.

And now for tomfoolery:
iPhone 4 and Sex: The Good, The Bad, and the HD Ugly


They tried a bit hard, when it is much simpler. After endless digs at Android for being the porn-friendly phone, he just added native ChatRoulette support (or at least between friends for now). For those who don't know what ChatRoulette is, it's basically the video equivalent of sexting, except with creepy strangers.
 
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Apple Hates Ads...Unless They're the Ones Selling Them

Short version:

Apple's new browser blocks ads except for apple iAds, which just launched. Also, Gizmodo hates apple.

Long version:
Apple loves talking about how much it supports the open web, vis-?-vis the buzzy but murkily qualified shorthand of HTML5.


The big new user feature in Safari 5 is "Safari Reader." It's kind of like Instapaper, the brilliant iPhone/iPad app, which serves as a sort of an time-shifting adblocker for web content, stripping out the cruft—especially ads—and leaving a clean, book-like river of text.


Safari Reader pulls all of the text and images out of articles, too, even multi-page pieces, and presents them in a single, supremely readable view without "annoying ads and other visual distractions," as Apple underlines. The major difference between Instapaper and Safari is that Instapaper was created as a way to read articles later on an iPhone offline, in an elegant way. Safari Reader springs to life on top of a webpage inside Safari. By ripping, reformatting and re-presenting webpages and articles within Safari, Apple isn't just making web reading more pleasant; it's expressing a contempt for the web by sanitizing it. Not unlike the App Store, in some ways.
Jim Lynch presents a fairly apocalyptic view of Safari Reader. Paraphrased, Lynch says Safari 5 is the first browser with a built-in ad blocker. It kills pageviews by reducing multipage articles to a single page, and strips publishers of control over how their content is displayed. (Update: Ars' great piece on this same topic says that the scripting does call the ads for the time being, it just doesn't display them.) It'll spread to other browsers, as marquee features tend to do, and publishers will be screwed as they lose pageviews and ad dollars. (I don't think it will be quite this bad, maybe because I want it as a feature for Safari on the iPad, where it would prove more useful.)
Yet Apple sells iAds. While publishers can't control what their content looks like on the web with Safari Reader, they can create content apps, as Wired and PopSci have done. And hey, they can have fancy ads, too—if they use Apple's iAds program. iAds can't be blocked. They can be deeply interactive. They can collect data other ad services—at least the other biggies—cannot collect.
It's a clever pivot: introducing an ad blocker for the web just before it launches an ad platform that'll be the superior way to to deliver advertising to a captive audience on devices that by definition block the other most prevalent form of interactive advertising on the web (Flash). And more than a little awkward, from a publisher's perspective, given how much Apple says it loves them and wants to help them: Even though a publisher's best interest is to have its content available on the most universal platform possible, the only path to salvation Apple actually offers runs through the App Store. The web won't save them, goes the pitch, because web ads are awful—they might even use Flash!—and everyone just blocks or ignores them anyway.
But iAds? Innovative, compelling, interactive and—on a platform which disallows browser plug-ins like Instapaper—completely unignorable.
 
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This is a very intentional move to undercut google and promote their own upstart ad system. The courts will surely decide whether it is the latest in many moves that seem anti-trustish.

Apple can advertise on Google. They've even finagled their AT&T lackeys to replace an android phone's native search with Yahoo instead of Google.

Google might be evil (that packet sniffing fiasco was a doozy), but they sure are friendlier while being that way. Apple just plain flaunts it.

AdMob Is Not Happy About Being Excluded From iOS
Yesterday, All Things D pointed out that Apple's revised iOS terms only allowed "independent" ad agencies to collect user data, effectively blocking the Google-dependent AdMob from competing on Apple's devices. AdMob doesn't like that one bit!

In the humorously and appropriately titled company blog "The Life and Times of AdMob," AdMob CEO Omar Hamoui expressed his displeasure, and explained why you—users and developers—should be displeased, too:
Let's be clear. This change is not in the best interests of users or developers. In the history of technology and innovation, it's clear that competition delivers the best outcome. Artificial barriers to competition hurt users and developers and, in the long run, stall technological progress.
Still, there's little that Hamoui can do in this situation to force Apple's hand. Ironically, it was the emergence of Apple's iAd platform, certain to be <a href="">a powerful competitor in the mobile advertising space, that reportedly swayed the FTC to allow Google's acquisition of AdMob last month. A powerful competitor indeed.
comments said:
Apple is reeeeaaallly, trying to push the monopoly envelope here.

The App store is the only store allowed.
You have to make your Apps on Apple's computers with Apple's software.
You cannot sell your own Apps.
Apple gets to choose how much they skim from the top.
You cannot compete with Apple
You cannot raise money in any way without paying Apple.
What does this mean for all of the apps that are *already* using AdMob? Is Apple just going to pull all of them?? Literally hundreds of the most popular apps are already using it...
 
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Apple's Worst Security Breach: 114,000 iPad Owners Exposed
Apple has suffered another embarrassment. A security breach has exposed iPad owners including dozens of CEOs, military officials, and top politicians. They?and every other buyer of the cellular-enabled tablet?could be vulnerable to spam marketing and malicious hacking. The breach, which comes just weeks after an Apple employee lost an iPhone prototype in a bar, exposed the most exclusive email list on the planet, a collection of early-adopter iPad 3G subscribers that includes thousands of A-listers in finance, politics and media, from New York Times Co. CEO Janet Robinson to Diane Sawyer of ABC News to film mogul Harvey Weinstein to Mayor Michael Bloomberg. It even appears that White House Chief of Staff Rahm Emanuel's information was compromised.
It doesn't stop there. According to the data we were given by the web security group that exploited vulnerabilities on the AT&T network, we believe 114,000 user accounts have been compromised, although it's possible that confidential information about every iPad 3G owner in the U.S. has been exposed
Should I Worry About the Apple iPad + AT&T Security Breach? (Probably Not.)
Should I be worried?

As far as your email address being leaked?net effect: spam!?this isn't anything to lose sleep over. And the ICC-IDs, well, they probably aren't of much use to hackers either?though it might be possible to plug the ICC-ID into a SIM cloner. (We've reached out to a security researcher for clarification.)
But to play down this leak due to the relatively harmless nature of the exposed data is to miss the point: A thing that customers had assumed to be private, and entrusted to AT&T, was inadvertently made public. The worry here is less about your email address and ICC-ID than it is about a company that has all kinds of your personal data?your SS#, billing information and the like?can't seem to keep its data safe.
Any lessons? What can I do to safeguard against this?

It's a good policy to use a secondary email address when possible. A lot of the people on Ryan's list used their work email addresses?some from within the upper echelons of government and industry?which is generally a bad idea. But again, this leak isn't so much about the exposed email addresses as it is about data security in general, so the only lesson you could really glean from this is to trust no one, which isn't very useful at all, ha ha! Ugh. [Gawker]http://gizmodo.com/5559686/the-little-feature-that-led-to-atts-ipad-security-breach
Turns out, it's from a tiny convenience feature you probably never noticed. When you sign up for 3G service on iPad, AT&T looks at the SIM serial number, which Amoroso says "is not a secret, like the serial number on the dishwasher," and asks for an email address you'd like to be contacted at. When you access the AT&T website to check your data account from your iPad (Settings -> Cellular Data -> View Account), it pre-populates your email address using the ICC-ID, so you don't have to type the email address every single time, but just your password. That's the feature Goatse exploited, using a script that Amoroso describes as a "brute force attack," trying ICC-IDs as part of an HTTP request until they gave up an email address. And it's why the damage really does appear to be limited to iPads' ICC-IDs and the email addresses associated with them. How many accounts were exposed, precisely, is still an open question, since AT&T is "doing the forensics as we speak"

...
AT&T has already turned off the feature. If you to go your iPad's 3G account settings, you'll notice your email is no longer already completed, so you have to type the whole thing out. I hope you don't have a terribly long email address.
What about the future, though? Could it happen again? Well, Amoroso says "as we innovate on the provisioning process, reinventing the way we provision service, there will be growing problems," and "you can probably think of a lot of features because the community went through some sort of security issue that requried some hardening." So: maybe. It's the classic tradeoff between convenience and privacy.
The entire episode is a bit ironic in the context of a talk AT&T CEO Randall Stephenson gave at an IBM conference yesterday that was focused heavily on privacy and security: "If you lose the customers' confidence once on a privacy...it would be a hard issue to recover from." I guess we'll see.
 
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That didn't take long:

US Targets Apple In iAd Antitrust Probe
Word comes from the Financial Times today that US regulators are planning an antitrust investigation into Apple's iAd mobile advertising platform. At issue: the iAd terms and conditions that allow Apple to shut out Google entirely from its potent ecosystem.
What's not as clear is whether the investigation will lead to anything, or even who—between the FTC and the Department of Justice—will be running it. The details offered by the FT are scarce, and Apple's not talking. But if and when the case is opened, it'll be fascinating to watch play out. [FT via Engadget]
 
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sparcboxbuck;1717408; said:
The ATT site is a cluster [censored]. Not working for me either. I am on hold with premier services 866-499-8008.

Good luck.

This is what I got when trying to upgrade on AT&T.com:
There was a problem with your request.

P1015: We're sorry, but we are experiencing a system error that prevents us from completing your request. For non iPhone related upgrades, please call Customer Care at 1-888-867-4384 and provide the error number at the beginning of this message.
 
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yeah I finally got through on apple.com....I really did not want to order over on att.com

The problem for me was I had the iphone in my cart I just could not checkout...I had to keep refreshing and then finally it went through. Hopefully it actually arrives next Thursday. Seems to be a ton of demand for this iPhone.
 
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