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Apple iPhone a danger to China national security

hokkien

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
BEIJING - Chinese state media on Friday branded Apple Inc's iPhone a threat to national security because of the smartphone's ability to track and time-stamp user locations.

A report by broadcaster CCTV criticised the iPhone's "Frequent Locations" function for allowing users to be tracked and information about them revealed.

"This is extremely sensitive data," said a researcher interviewed by the broadcaster. If the data were accessed, it could reveal an entire country's economic situation and "even state secrets," the researcher said.

Apple was not available for immediate comment.

Apple has frequently come under fire from Chinese state media, which accused the company of providing user data to US intelligence agencies and have called for 'severe punishment'. It has also been criticised for poor customer service.

The California-based company is not the only US firm to suffer from Chinese media ire.

Google Inc services have been disrupted in China for over a month, while the central government procurement office has banned new government computers from using Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) Windows 8 operating system.

Other US hardware firms such as Cisco Systems Inc (CSCO.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and IBM Corp (IBM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) have experienced a backlash in China from what analysts and companies have termed the 'Snowden Effect', after US spying revelations released last year by former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
 

tanwahtiu

Alfrescian
Loyal
only the Chinese can stand up to evil whitemen nonsense. Any technologies from the white has evil intention and purpose to destroy people.

The descendants will see more warfare from the evil white against the Far East people.

Technology warfare is easy to destroy, just go and shoot down their satellites and data station. Daft angmoh inventions are flawed anyway.


BEIJING - Chinese state media on Friday branded Apple Inc's iPhone a threat to national security because of the smartphone's ability to track and time-stamp user locations.

A report by broadcaster CCTV criticised the iPhone's "Frequent Locations" function for allowing users to be tracked and information about them revealed.

"This is extremely sensitive data," said a researcher interviewed by the broadcaster. If the data were accessed, it could reveal an entire country's economic situation and "even state secrets," the researcher said.

Apple was not available for immediate comment.

Apple has frequently come under fire from Chinese state media, which accused the company of providing user data to US intelligence agencies and have called for 'severe punishment'. It has also been criticised for poor customer service.

The California-based company is not the only US firm to suffer from Chinese media ire.

Google Inc services have been disrupted in China for over a month, while the central government procurement office has banned new government computers from using Microsoft Corp's (MSFT.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) Windows 8 operating system.

Other US hardware firms such as Cisco Systems Inc (CSCO.O: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) and IBM Corp (IBM.N: Quote, Profile, Research, Stock Buzz) have experienced a backlash in China from what analysts and companies have termed the 'Snowden Effect', after US spying revelations released last year by former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden.
 

SAMMMYBOY

Alfrescian
Loyal
On Saturday afternoon, 21-year-old Aracelis Ayuso was hit and killed by a No. 4 subway train in New York City’s Union Square station.

Officials say she lost her balance and fell onto the tracks while using her iPad, the New York Post reports.

Ayuso, officials say, nearly dropped the device, which caused her to misstep and fall off the platform just as the train was pulling up. Her boyfriend blames exhaustion, not the iPad, for her death. He says Ayuso, who was a young mother, fell because she was waking up early to support their daughter. She worked for City Bakery.

" She was exhausted and coming home from work ... [Witnesses] just kept saying she looked tired and she just kind of fell forward off the platform," he told the New York Post.

The driver saw Ayuso but was unable to stop in time.

Increasingly, mobile devices are to blame for deaths and accidents. A 2013 study found that texting while driving causes more teenage deaths and accidents than alcohol and DUIs. A 2011 study found that reaching for a device makes you 1.4 times more likely to get in a crash or accident
 
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