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Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iPhone. Show all posts
Friday, October 18, 2013
Apple looking forward To Bolster Siri, Find Out ?

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  After Reportedly Buying Cue, A Personal Assistant App, Apple May Bolster Siri

KnowledgeHutt.Blogspot.com                                                         CUE Service has been shut Down 
Apple AAPL +0.75% seems serious about developing the technology that powers its personal assistant Siri, having reportedly bought Cue, a personal assistant app for the iPhone that processes contacts, e-mail and files to present a daily agenda. It’s bought the company for more than $35 million, according to reports in TechCrunch and Apple Insider this morning. Cue’s co-founder and CEO told Forbes in August that while Cue had worked for the last three years creating its data-organizing software, it was “hard” to design an interface that consumers could understand and use easily.

Cue had previously received more than $4.7 million in funding investors including Sequoia Capital and more recently Index Ventures. DropBox was one of the interested suitors in Cue, according to TechCrunch. Cue’s CEO could not be reached for more details by phone, though a message on his sitesays the service has shut down. Premium users will receive a pro-rated refund and all data and personal information has been “permanently deleted,” it said.


Apple often doesn’t confirm its acquisitions and is only saying that, “Apple buys smaller technology companies from time to time, and we generally do not discuss our purpose or plans.”

For Siri, Apple currently uses a combination of its own software and voice recognition technology from Nuance, via a licensing deal thought by analysts to be worth $40-60 million a year. Earlier this year it emerged that Apple had established a research center in Boston where its staff were working on Siri. It is unclear if Apple’s long-term intentions are to eventually run Siri independent of Nuance’s technology, similar to the way it developed its own Maps application so that the iPhone could stop using Google GOOG +13.31% Maps as a default navigation app.

The purchase of Cue suggests that Apple certainly wants to differentiate its personal assistant offering from other competitors, in particular Google Now, an app for Android phones that’s also a central feature of the new Moto X phone. The device can be “woken up” with voice commands directed to Google Now, without needing to touch the device.

Cue used to be called Greplin but changed its name to Cue in June 2012. The company’s CEO and co-founder Daniel Gross told me in August that there were a number of challenges in cross pollinating data between different sources such as calendars and email, and apps like Evernote and LinkedIn LNKD +3.76%. Gross said he had been working for the last three years on building software that could securely cross-reference and present personal data on a smartphone, most recently with 14 engineers.

Ironically, he was also skeptical of becoming a white-label vendor, so that other technology companies could use Cue’s software under their own brand names.

“People ask why don’t we white label what we do and let someone solve the interface problem,” he said. “My opinion is the goal and mission of company is to be a brand people live and breath every day and hopefully love and appreciate and find useful.” Perhaps that opinion was bound to change when Apple came knocking.
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SHANGHAI: A young Chinese couple are facing criminal punishment for "selling" their daughter and using part of the proceeds to buy an Apple iPhone, state media said on Friday.

Shanghai prosecutors have brought a case against the couple for human trafficking after they illegally put their third child up for adoption through online postings and accepted money for the baby, the Liberation Daily reported.

Investigators found the mother, whose full name was not given, used the money to buy an iPhone, high-end sports shoes and other products, also online, it said.

Apple's products are wildly popular in China, where a teenager sold his kidney and used the funds to buy an iPhone and iPad in an incident widely reported last year.

But the couple told police that they wanted the girl to have a better upbringing than they could afford, since they already had two children.

"Giving away the child was not for obtaining benefits, but giving the child better guarantees," one said.

Shanghai police and prosecutors could not be immediately reached for comment.

Shanghai media reports did not give the amount the couple received, but their online postings referred to 30,000 yuan and 50,000 yuan ($4,900 and $8,200).

Apple last month launched the iPhone 5s, including a gold-coloured model, and the more budget-conscious iPhone 5c in China.
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Unbreakable Apples iMessage encryption is vulnerable to eavesdropping attack

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Knowledgehutt.blogspot.com

Though Apple claims iMessage has end-to-end encryption, But researchers claimed at a security conference that Apple’s iMessage system is not protected and the company can easily access it.


Cyril Cattiaux - better known as pod2g, who has developed iOS jailbreak software, said that the company’s claim about iMessage protection by unbreakable encryption is just a lie, because the weakness is in the key infrastructure as it is controlled by Apple: they can change a key anytime they want, thus read the content of our iMessage.


Basically, when you send an iMessage to someone, you grab their public key from Apple, and encrypt your message using that public key. On the other end, recipients have their own private key that they use to decrypt this message. A third-party won’t be able to see the actual message unless they have access to the private key.


Trust and public keys always have a problem, but the researchers noted that there's no evidence that Apple or the NSA is actually reading iMessages, but say that it's possible. "Apple has no reason to do so. But what of intelligence agencies?" he said.


The researchers were able to create a bogus certificate authority and then add it to an iPhone Keychain to proxify SSL encrypted communications to and from the device, and in the process discovered that their AppleID and password was being transmitted in clear text.


He says that since Apple controls the public key directory that gives you the public key for every user, it could perform a man-in-the-middle (MITM) attack to intercept your messages if asked to by a government agency.

A solution for Apple would be to store public keys locally in a protected database within iOS, as then the keys could be compared.



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