Amazon to Release 7-Inch Tablet by October, 10.1-inch Tablet by Early 2012

Amazon’s much-anticipated Android tablet is said to be the iPad killer that Android enthusiasts have been waiting for. If you’re a fan, you might just be able to get your hands on an Amazon tablet in time for the holidays. But another, bigger one is around the corner.

No 10-Incher Yet

The rumor mill from among Asian OEMs is buzzing with excitement about Amazon’s planned tablet release. According to Digitimes, manufacturers in China are already preparing to meet orders. China’s Quanta Computer expects to make shipments of the 7-inch version by October, which means the tablets will be available in time for the holiday rush.

However, the 10.1-inch version will have to wait until 2012. Foxconn Electronics, which produces the Kindle eBook reader for Amazon to the tune of 15 to 18 million units a year, is expected to commence production by first quarter of 2012, sources from upstream suppliers say.

The 10.1-inch version is expected to ship with Nvidia’s upcoming Kal-El class quad-core mobile chipsets. Meanwhile, the 7-inch version will run on a dual-core version of the same chip. The 7-incher is said to focus on eBook-reading, and is likely positioned as a higher-end version of Amazon’s own Kindle e-reader.

via Amazon to Release 7-Inch Tablet by October, 10.1-inch Tablet by Early 2012.

Apple reportedly setting up system for remote iPhone diagnostics

AppleCare technicians may soon be able to glean troubleshooting information from your iPhone, saving you a trip to the Apple Store. The company is reportedly set to deploy a Web-based tool to collect various bits of diagnostic information from an iOS device in order to transmit it directly to Apple’s servers for analysis.

According to a source speaking to HardMac, Apple has internally announced that it has created a Web-based version of diagnostic tools that AppleCare technicians are already using. The tool allows a technician to send an e-mail (or presumably an SMS) with a specially crafted URL. When a user clicks the URL, it connects to Apple’s servers and collects various bits of data about the device’s state, the health of the battery, and the version of iOS running.

via Apple reportedly setting up system for remote iPhone diagnostics.

Hackers Impersonate Google to Snoop on Users in Iran – NYTimes.com

Hackers passed themselves off as the Internet giant Google with the apparent goal of snooping on people using Google services in Iran, the company said.

It was the latest in a string of breaches that call into question the reliability of certificates that are supposed to verify the authenticity of Web sites. Such breaches make dissidents and human rights workers particularly vulnerable because they can allow repressive regimes, or supporters of those regimes, to spy on their online activities.

In this case, the attackers hacked into the site of a Dutch company, one of many that have the authority to issue the digital certificates, and obtained one that they used to impersonate Google. When users in Iran went to a Google site, including Gmail and Google Docs, they could be intercepted by the impostors in what is known as a man-in-the-middle attack.

via Hackers Impersonate Google to Snoop on Users in Iran – NYTimes.com.

Facebook Pays $40G To Hackers In New ‘Bug Bounty’ Scheme | FoxNews.com

Since launching its “bug bounty” program three weeks ago, Facebook has forked out $40,000 to hackers who detected security flaws on the social networking site.

About fifty people who have successfully identified problems have been acknowledged on Facebook’s “whitehat” — geek-speak for a hacker who is a good guy — site, and to date, Facebook has paid one individual $7,000 for flagging six issues and $5,000 for a particularly bad flaw, the Financial Times reported Wednesday.

“We realize … that there are many talented and well-intentioned security experts around the world who don’t work for Facebook,” Facebook’s chief security officer, Joe Sullivan, wrote on the company’s blog Monday.

“We established this bug bounty program in an effort to recognize and reward these individuals for their good work and encourage others to join,” he added.

Facebook said that while it had received time-wasting alerts from people “looking for publicity,” the program was a success.

via Facebook Pays $40G To Hackers In New ‘Bug Bounty’ Scheme | FoxNews.com.

Windows 8 to directly support ISO and VHD files | Microsoft – CNET News

Windows 8 will let you open and view ISO and VHD files all on its own, according to the latest “Building Windows 8″ blog from Microsoft.

Posted yesterday by Microsoft engineer Rajeev Nagar, the new blog called “Accessing data in ISO and VHD files” revealed that native support for ISO and VHD files was one feature often requested by users, prompting the company to add it to its upcoming OS.

ISO (International Organization for Standardization) files are image files that contain the contents of a CD or DVD. Large programs available for download through the Internet are increasingly being created as ISO files. For example, the programs that Microsoft offers through its TechNet subscriptions are packaged as ISO files.

With Windows 7 and prior Windows versions, you’re forced to burn an ISO file to a CD or DVD in order to install the program stored within that file. Of course, many users rely on third-party ISO utilities instead to work past the limitations in Windows. Virtual CloneDrive and Daemon Tools are two utilities that can “mount” ISO files so that the OS can see them as disk drives, letting you directly install the program.

via Windows 8 to directly support ISO and VHD files | Microsoft – CNET News.

Adobe CreatePDF App Lets Users Create PDF Files From iPhone, iPad, iPod

Adobe Systems recently launched an application for iOS devices that lets users author files in Portable Document Format straight from their mobile devices. With CreatePDF, users can author PDFs that will appear onscreen the same way on a computer, mobile device or web browser.

Create PDFs From the Cloud

With a diverse ecosystem of computing devices, including mobile phones, smartphones, tablets and desktop computers, documents often appear differently when viewed on different devices. While desktop computers can convert documents into PDF, most mobile devices don’t have enough computing power to do this. But with Adobe’s CreatePDF, the actual conversion process is done in the cloud using Adobe’s online service. Documents published as PDF can then be sent via email or shared through other compatible iOS apps.

via Adobe CreatePDF App Lets Users Create PDF Files From iPhone, iPad, iPod.

Half of America Is Using Social Networks – NYTimes.com

Social networks have crossed another milestone.

For the first time, half of all adults in the United States said they used a social networking site, according to a survey released on Friday by the Pew Research Center.

That is 50 percent of all Americans, not just those who say they are online. Six years ago, when Pew first conducted a similar survey, only 5 percent of all adults said they used social sites, like Facebook, LinkedIn or MySpace.

It is a sign of how deeply and widely social networking companies have penetrated the lives of ordinary people and, in turn, transformed the ways in which people communicate, authorities govern and companies sell things.

Parents use Facebook to vet nannies, carmakers to introduce new models, police to keep tabs on suspects. Federal government authorities are preparing this weekend to use social networking sites for hurricane preparation on the East Coast.

The Pew survey found that among adults who are online, the rates of participation were higher: 65 percent, according to the survey, up slightly from 61 percent last year.

Not surprising, the sites are more popular among younger people: 83 percent of people surveyed in the 18-29 age bracket said they used social networking sites, compared with 51 percent of those in the 50-64 bracket. The young are also twice as likely to use social sites every day.

via Half of America Is Using Social Networks – NYTimes.com.

There’s an App – and a Risk – for That | Law.com

iPads are the hottest tablet technology in corporate America today. They’re light, sleek, and portable, and thanks to a rich and steady stream of business and entertainment apps introduced daily, people can use them for a burgeoning selection of personal and professional tasks. Now in their second iteration, iPads have proven valuable for many business functions. Salespeople have greater flexibility and access to digital product information in the field, medical professionals have bedside access to patient records, and mobile business executives can give stunning presentations and enjoy instant access to corporate data—and all right at their fingertips.

Like many new gadgets, iPads often first appear in businesses as employee-owned devices, prompting questions of if and how to allow for their connection to the corporate network. As the world of iPad apps matures, many companies have taken steps to issue the devices to their workforces, sometimes as replacements for laptops. But with technological innovation moving at warp speed, corporations need to frequently update their policies on data management and compliance to keep up with new developments—and the advent of the iPad is a case in point. The time has come for in-house counsel to take note of potential information management, e-discovery, and privacy risks presented by these devices.

Rule 34 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure is written broadly enough to cover new devices, such as iPads, that create, transmit, and preserve electronically stored information (ESI). As companies deploy more and different devices, dispersing their sources of ESI, the risk that preservation and collection efforts will fail to prevent spoliation and other e-discovery perils increases. While there are currently no published court opinions addressing discovery obligations as to iPad content, courts have extended the duty to preserve and produce to content on PDAs (personal digital assistants) such as BlackBerrys, particularly when such information is unique rather than replicated on the company’s network. Counsel should assume that litigation hold obligations will extend to iPad content in their employees’ possession or control.

via There’s an App – and a Risk – for That.

WikiLeaks Cables Detail Apple’s Battle With Piracy in China | News & Opinion | PCMag.com

In China, as iPhones and iPads grow in popularity, Apple has had to battle against the piracy of its products. Though it’s been a problem for some time, Apple was slow to take action against offenders, recently leaked documents from WikiLeaks have revealed.

A September 2008 cable from the Beijing embassy says Apple formed a team in March 2008 to curb piracy in China. But CNN says three years later, the piracy of consumer electronics isn’t a pressing concern to the Chinese government.

There’s been some evidence of this reported lately, and it extends to more than just Apple gadgets. In July, an American blogger living in the southwestern Chinese city of Kunming uncovered five electronics retailers posing as official Apple Stores. The publicity and a request from Apple’s Shanghai office prompted Kunming city officials to investigate, and it said the stores were forced to remove all Apple trademarks and all allegedly complied. However, pictures posted online show that the stores had not changed much; many just opted for different name.

The WikiLeaks cables detail Apple’s early plans for taking on counterfeiters, which included first taking on street vendors and retailers, then going after factories, from which parts for Apple products are often swiped  to build fake gadgets. In the last prong of the battle plan, Apple would reportedly target online retailers.

The cable reflects Apple’s typical clandestine modus operandi. “Low-profile raids are a good option for Apple, a company that wants to stay away from too much publicity surrounding this issue,” the cable said.

Not surprisingly, Apple reps did not respond to questions on the matter.

via WikiLeaks Cables Detail Apple’s Battle With Piracy in China | News & Opinion | PCMag.com.

Behind Google’s $500 Million Settlement With U.S. – NYTimes.com

Can a search engine be held responsible for how consumers use the products or services allowed to be advertised on it? That question goes to a core issue in the criminal law regarding the responsibility of suppliers for the use of products they sell.

There were negligence lawsuits in the early 1990s against Soldier of Fortune magazine for advertisements it ran for people willing to engage in criminal acts, including murder. These cases were brought by victims of attacks and involved a question about whether the magazine published ads that were a “clear and present danger” to the public, and therefore unprotected by the First Amendment.

Unlike a private lawsuit alleging negligence, the Justice Department’s nonprosecution agreement with Google involved an assertion that the company aided a criminal violation — i.e., that it was an active participant in a crime.

To prove accomplice liability, the prosecution must show the defendant provided some assistance in the commission of the crime, which can include counseling or encouraging the offense. There is a fine line between supplying goods that are later used for the commission of a crime and actually assisting in its completion.

Even if one does furnish some measure of assistance, the law further requires that the accomplice be aware of the user’s intention to commit a crime and intend to give some assistance or encouragement in its completion.

The Justice Department’s position in the Google case emphasizing the awareness of its chief executive shows it took an aggressive approach about what can constitute aiding a violation of the drug importation laws.

Google was not involved in the actual movement of the prescriptions, but the government viewed its role as sufficiently important to the success of the Canadian pharmacy sales that it was similar to someone who actually supplied or shipped misbranded drugs.

The fact that the case was resolved by a nonprosecution agreement can be seen as an indication that the Justice Department understood its position on accomplice liability could be open to challenge if criminal charges were filed in court.

via Behind Google’s $500 Million Settlement With U.S. – NYTimes.com.