OnStar Tracks Your Car Even When You Cancel Service | Threat Level | Wired.com

Navigation-and-emergency-services company OnStar is notifying its six million account holders that it will keep a complete accounting of the speed and location of OnStar-equipped vehicles, even for drivers who discontinue monthly service.

OnStar began e-mailing customers Monday about its update to the privacy policy, which grants OnStar the right to sell that GPS-derived data in an anonymized format.

Adam Denison, a spokesman for the General Motors subsidiary, said OnStar does not currently sell customer data, but it reserves that right. He said both the new and old privacy policies allow OnStar to chronicle a vehicle’s every movement and its speed, though it’s not clear where that’s stated in the old policy.

“What’s changed [is that if] you want to cancel your OnStar service, we are going to maintain a two-way connection to your vehicle unless the customer says otherwise,” Denison said in a telephone interview.

The connection will continue, he said, to make it “easier to re-enroll” in the program, which charges plans from $19 to $29 monthly for help with navigation and emergencies.

via OnStar Tracks Your Car Even When You Cancel Service | Threat Level | Wired.com.

Apple launches $69 OS X Lion thumb drive for those who can’t download it | VentureBeat

Apple on Tuesday launched a Mac OS X Lion thumb drive for people who wanted to uncage their own copy but didn’t have a strong enough Internet connection or capped bandwidth.

When Apple released Lion back in July, the decision to only offer Lion as a 4GB download was seen as groundbreaking and a new standard for future software releases. But it peeved some customers who don’t have fast Internet or use an ISP with bandwidth limitations. Apple’s only solution to that problem was to let customers download it using a Wi-Fi connection at the Apple Store. Of course, not everyone lives near an Apple Store.

The thumb drive ships in between one and three business days and you must have at least 7GB of free hard drive space to install it. Users that install with the thumb drive will not have access to the Lion Recovery option and will need to re-install the OS with thumb drive if they run into problems.

via Apple launches $69 OS X Lion thumb drive for those who can’t download it | VentureBeat.

AT&T shames unauthorized phone tetherers, gives ultimatum

AT&T has begun cracking down on smartphone customers—particularly iPhone users—who have been secretly tethering their smartphones to their laptops without paying for a tethering plan. The company sent text messages to the offending users, followed up with an e-mail, that says they’ve been identified as taking advantage the feature without paying up. If those users continue to tether and don’t make changes to their accounts, AT&T will automatically begin charging for the DataPro tethering plan from March 27. Those who quit tethering before then won’t have to upgrade their accounts.

“Many AT&T customers use their smartphones as a broadband connection for other devices, like laptops, netbooks or other smartphones—a practice commonly known as tethering. Tethering can be an efficient way for our customers to enjoy the benefits of AT&T’s mobile broadband network and use more than one device to stay in touch with important people and information,” reads the beginning of AT&T’s e-mail.

“Our records show that you use this capability, but are not subscribed to our tethering plan… if we don’t hear from you, we’ll plan to automatically enroll you into DataPro 4GB after March 27, 2011. The new plan—whether you sign up on your own or we automatically enroll you—will replace your current smartphone data plan, including if you are on an unlimited data plan.”

AT&T currently offers either a $15/month 250MB 3G data plan for smartphone users, or a $25/month 2GB plan. If customers want to tether the legit way, they must subscribe to the 2GB data plan and pay AT&T another $20 for the privilege of sharing their smartphone’s 3G connection with a computer or hotspot, at which point the monthly data cap goes up to 4GB. iPhone users who jailbreak their devices have long been able to tether without paying anything extra to AT&T—it’s one of the main reasons people jailbreak—making those iPhone users particularly susceptible to AT&T’s latest crackdown.

via AT&T shames unauthorized phone tetherers, gives ultimatum.

Man used neighbor’s Wi-Fi to threaten Vice President Biden – Computerworld

A Blaine, Minn., man has pleaded guilty to charges that he hacked into his neighbor’s Wi-Fi connection to e-mail death threats and child pornography, apparently with the intention of causing trouble for the unsuspecting neighbor.

Barry Vincent Ardolf, 45, pleaded guilty last week to charges of hacking, identity theft, possession of child pornography and making threats to Vice President Joe Biden. According to prosecutors, he used the Aircrack Wi-Fi cracking software to gain access to his neighbor’s WEP-encrypted network. He then created Yahoo and MySpace accounts in his victim’s name and launched a campaign to embarrass and cause legal troubles for the neighbor.

He used the Yahoo account to mail child pornography to his neighbor’s co-workers, writing “Check it out. New family pic,” in one Feb. 22 e-mail. Several such e-mails were sent to co-workers at the large Minneapolis law firm where the neighbor worked, according to court filings.

Ardolf also posted child pornography to the fake MySpace page. “I bet my co-worker that since I’m a lawyer and a darn great one that I could get away with putting up porn on my site here,” he wrote on the page. “I bet that all I have to do is say there is plausible deniability since anybody could have put this up on my site.”

Ardolf had been upset with the lawyer since 2008, when he filed a police report against Ardolf saying he allegedly “inappropriately touched and kissed the next-door neighbor’s toddler on the mouth,” court records state.

via Man used neighbor’s Wi-Fi to threaten Vice President Biden – Computerworld.

Apple Lawyers Up for Patent Showdowns With Nokia, Motorola – Bloomberg

Steve Jobs made Apple Inc.’s iPhone one of the best-selling smartphones on the market with its touch screen, fast Web connection and access to more than 300,000 downloadable applications. Now he’s adding lawyers to the mix.

This week, Apple is squaring off against Nokia Oyj, the world’s largest mobile-phone maker, before the International Trade Commission. The dispute, in which each side alleges intellectual property violations, is also a precursor to Apple patent battles with Motorola Inc. and HTC Corp.

At stake is leadership in the U.S. smartphone market. Cupertino, California-based Apple is trying to protect its right to import the iPhone, while shutting out rivals, particularly those whose phones are powered by Google Inc.’s Android operating system, the world’s most popular smartphone software. Android-based phones also are made abroad.

via Apple Lawyers Up for Patent Showdowns With Nokia, Motorola – Bloomberg.

Apple Lawyers Up for Patent Showdowns With Nokia, Motorola – Bloomberg

Steve Jobs made Apple Inc.’s iPhone one of the best-selling smartphones on the market with its touch screen, fast Web connection and access to more than 300,000 downloadable applications. Now he’s adding lawyers to the mix.

This week, Apple is squaring off against Nokia Oyj, the world’s largest mobile-phone maker, before the International Trade Commission. The dispute, in which each side alleges intellectual property violations, is also a precursor to Apple patent battles with Motorola Inc. and HTC Corp.

At stake is leadership in the U.S. smartphone market. Cupertino, California-based Apple is trying to protect its right to import the iPhone, while shutting out rivals, particularly those whose phones are powered by Google Inc.’s Android operating system, the world’s most popular smartphone software. Android-based phones also are made abroad.

via Apple Lawyers Up for Patent Showdowns With Nokia, Motorola – Bloomberg.

Opinion: Technology is key to implementing anti-bribery measures | Opinion | The Lawyer

Bribery is defined as both the giving and receiving of bribes in terms of someone who offers, promises or gives another, or requests, agrees to receive or accepts, a financial or other advantage in connection with a person performing a function improperly.

The deduction is that the improper performance of a function is one that breaches an expectation that the function will be performed in good faith, impartially or as a result of a position of trust. So there is no need to show corrupt intent.

Businesses must therefore reappraise their corporate compliance strategies and ensure their defences are up and running and that they have adequate measures

in place.

The two extremes – doing nothing or positioning an army of compliance people at every intersection in the organisation – are no longer feasible, whatever the guidelines say. But what can organisations do to ensure compliance without a serious impact on the established business process or a dent into the bottom line?

Measures can include anything from improving communication, introducing policies and investing in adherence measures, but without the appropriate technology companies are only papering over the cracks. Such technology should be able to anticipate wrongdoers using veiled speech to disguise their purposes and be able to derive meaning from content, enabling organisations to automate compliance.

The smoking gun usually resides in human-friendly information, such as emails, video and instant messaging, which is where regulators are learning to look.

With employees and associated organisations dispersed geographically, communicating in several languages and across data formats, legacy technologies fall short of providing a holistic view of activity, thus depriving organisations of the opportunity to take swift and effective action. It is only through using technology that understands information regardless of how it is expressed – in slang, jargon or even code – that organisations can automate compliance with legislation such as the UK Bribery Act.

via Opinion: Technology is key to implementing anti-bribery measures | Opinion | The Lawyer.

H.P.’s Foreign Entanglement – NYTimes.com

The bribery investigation began in Russia in connection with a contract with a former German subsidiary of H.P. that involved the installation of a computer network in, of all places, Russia’s chief prosecutor’s office. Russian and German prosecutors are looking into the transaction, which took place from 2002 to 2006, and have requested documents from the company.

In its 10-Q, H.P. notes for the first time that the investigation is not limited to that one contract in Russia: “The U.S. enforcement authorities have recently requested information from H.P. relating to certain governmental and quasi-governmental transactions in Russia and in the Commonwealth of Independent States subregion dating back to 2000.”

It is not clear how many contracts or transactions may be involved, but the expanded time frame and geographic scope probably means the inquiry will be an extended one, rather than something H.P. can wrap up quickly. As sometimes happens, once one part of a multinational company is scrutinized for bribery, problems in other areas can pop to the surface.

The recent settlement by Siemens of overseas bribery charges shows how corruption can spread throughout a company. Subsidiaries operating in France, Argentina, Turkey and the Middle East were found to have paid bribes to obtain contracts, and Siemens paid $800 million in criminal fines to the Justice Department and disgorgement to the S.E.C. as part of the settlement.

via H.P.’s Foreign Entanglement – NYTimes.com.

Skype’s new iPhone app: Net calling done right – msnbc.com

Today Skype released the latest version of its iPhone app, one that finally gives Skype the power that made it so successful on computers: It can “listen” for calls in the background, so people can reach you even when you’re not staring at the app. It can run over any internet connection you have, including cellular 3G network, without extra surcharges. And it fully supports multitasking, so you can open other apps and utilities while on a call.

via Skype’s new iPhone app: Net calling done right – Technology & science – Wireless – msnbc.com.

Cracking Down on Corruption | Opinion | The Moscow Times

The FCPA prohibits offering, giving or authorizing anything of value — whether cash or other tangible property or intangibles such as personal favors — to any non-U.S. official, including individuals serving state-controlled commercial enterprises, political party or political candidate to obtain some business advantage. The statute also requires companies to keep accurate books and maintain internal controls designed to prevent or detect improper payments.

Why is this relevant? First, non-U.S. companies are also subject to the FCPA if they conduct business in the United States, if their shares are listed on U.S. exchanges, or if they act on behalf of a U.S. company in connection with an illicit payment to a foreign public official.

Mercedes-Benz’s affiliate in Russia recently became the first Russian-based company to face criminal charges under the FCPA. It pleaded guilty in a Washington courtroom on April 2, agreeing to pay more than $27 million in criminal fines to settle charges arising out of bribes paid to Russian officials or relatives of Russian officials, in many cases through shell companies registered in the United States and into or through bank accounts located in the United States.

Second, Russian companies seeking to do business with U.S. partners and others subject to the FCPA must not present compliance risks that outweigh the potential benefits of cooperation. Faced with evidence that a partner is paying or considering bribes in connection with its business, the U.S. company must undertake an internal investigation that can take years to complete and cost tens of millions of dollars. Criminal and civil fines and remediation can add millions more. Given these risks to their reputation and to their bottom line, companies are increasingly saying “no” if they even suspect that a partner may subject them to risks of FCPA liability.

How can Russian companies make sure that they are saying “yes” instead of “no”? First, they must deal with potential compliance problems as quickly as possible and resolve any issues before their prospective partners begin performing due diligence. Second, it is important that companies institute strict and enforceable internal policies to regulate the use of cash, payments to charitable and political organizations at the request of public officials and the questionable use of intermediary companies.

All companies doing business in Russia should  make a commitment to integrity and transparency. This means that if they make or made illicit payments or provided other benefits to any public officials, these practices must stop and remedial methods must be taken as soon as possible.

Russian companies must be committed to the elimination of illicit payments, and the institution of internal controls should be embodied in a comprehensive anti-corruption compliance program. This must be supported by leadership and updated as the company’s business and anti-corruption rules evolve. Employees must believe that there will be real rewards for compliance in terms of compensation and advancement, and there must be real consequences for failure to comply.

Russian companies must ensure that third parties with which it does business are legitimate companies, capable of performing the services for which they were contracted, and not merely conduits for improper payments. To the extent that a third party is connected to a government official, it should be confident that he will not misuse his position for the company’s benefit.

via Cracking Down on Corruption | Opinion | The Moscow Times.