You don't seem to have any understanding of how Android works. The buck does stop at vendors since they are the ones who ship OS updates to consumers. Vendors don't prioritize updates because their customers don't…
That plus the fact that Android tablets aren't really used and the game is much better on a tablet than a phone.
Instead of minimizing or dismissing serious problems as 'already patched', hackers could help by warning consumers about the proliferation of Android malware. If sales were jeopardized, vendors would start caring about…
A commit to a repository does not equal a patch to the half billion vulnerable devices in the field.
What he leaves out is that he waited less than a day for a response. (You can see this from the radar shown in his video)
His video shows that he filed radars on July 19th - the same day downloaded the 100,000 developer names and email addresses. This is not responsible reporting, and he's clearly broken the UK computer misuse laws, since…
He claims that he reported the bug to Apple before doing a 'pentest' but his video shows a radar filed on 19th. On the plus side, it seems like not so much a 'penetration' as a data leak from some GWT code.
You can't have it both ways. They were transparent. Complaining that it was 3 days after the incident is irrelevant since we don't know how much investigation was required for them to understand the problem.
Seems like it's just your imagination: http://www.loopinsight.com/2013/07/21/apple-comments-on-deve...
How? They took it offline.
No. That tells us nothing about how big the breach is. Only how much effort it is taking for them to be confident that they've properly patched it.
In Google's case, it's because Google advocates (and often incentivizes) the disclosure into its care. Since Google has been participating in this spy program for at least 5 years, while continuing to encourage people…
That's exactly what Apple has tried to do, and although it hasn't completed the job yet, is much further along than anyone else. Google on the other hand makes it's money out of analyzing people's communication and…
Isn't that the chromebook pixel?
Doesn't it concern anyone that this is a computer on which absolutely nothing is private?
You don't seem to have any understanding of how Android works. The buck does stop at vendors since they are the ones who ship OS updates to consumers. Vendors don't prioritize updates because their customers don't…
That plus the fact that Android tablets aren't really used and the game is much better on a tablet than a phone.
Instead of minimizing or dismissing serious problems as 'already patched', hackers could help by warning consumers about the proliferation of Android malware. If sales were jeopardized, vendors would start caring about…
A commit to a repository does not equal a patch to the half billion vulnerable devices in the field.
What he leaves out is that he waited less than a day for a response. (You can see this from the radar shown in his video)
His video shows that he filed radars on July 19th - the same day downloaded the 100,000 developer names and email addresses. This is not responsible reporting, and he's clearly broken the UK computer misuse laws, since…
He claims that he reported the bug to Apple before doing a 'pentest' but his video shows a radar filed on 19th. On the plus side, it seems like not so much a 'penetration' as a data leak from some GWT code.
You can't have it both ways. They were transparent. Complaining that it was 3 days after the incident is irrelevant since we don't know how much investigation was required for them to understand the problem.
Seems like it's just your imagination: http://www.loopinsight.com/2013/07/21/apple-comments-on-deve...
How? They took it offline.
No. That tells us nothing about how big the breach is. Only how much effort it is taking for them to be confident that they've properly patched it.
In Google's case, it's because Google advocates (and often incentivizes) the disclosure into its care. Since Google has been participating in this spy program for at least 5 years, while continuing to encourage people…
That's exactly what Apple has tried to do, and although it hasn't completed the job yet, is much further along than anyone else. Google on the other hand makes it's money out of analyzing people's communication and…
Isn't that the chromebook pixel?
Doesn't it concern anyone that this is a computer on which absolutely nothing is private?