Phone No One Uses Will No Longer Carry Game No One Plays
from the but-what-about-those-angry-birds dept
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by Dealbreaker
Thu, Jan 31st 2013 8:09pm
Filed Under:
blackberry, brickbreaker, games, phones, wall street
Companies:
blackberry, rim
At the end of last month, popular UAE footballer Theyab Awana was killed in a high speed crash near Abu Dhabi, and it was claimed that he was sending a message on his BlackBerry when he hit a lorry.That would suggest a pretty major third variable which likely distorts the impact of the Blackberry outage.
The football star's father, Awana Ahmad Al Mosabi, made an emotional plea to people not to use smartphones while driving, and a Facebook campaign against the use of BlackBerry Messenger while driving has grown in popularity.
by Mike Masnick
Tue, Aug 9th 2011 7:03pm
Filed Under:
blackberry, david lammy, london, riots
Companies:
rim
Steve Kavanagh, the deputy assistant commissioner of the Metropolitan police, said that "really inflamatory, inaccurate" messages on Twitter were mainly to blame for the disorder. "Social media and other methods have been used to organise these levels of greed and criminality," he said at a press conference on Monday afternoon.Ah, right, just like vocal cords, pamphlets, telephones and other communication tools "were mainly to blame" for previous riots. Hint to the Metropolitan police: if you're going to always blame the tool, you're not going to do a very good job dealing with riots. If people want to speak out, they'll figure out a way to speak out. It's not the technology that is to blame. The technology is just a tool, and if you block off one path, you can be damn sure that they'll figure out another path instead.
by Mike Masnick
Fri, Oct 1st 2010 2:01am
Filed Under:
blackberry, emails, encryption, india, spying
Companies:
rim
The telecom department has rejected the interception solution offered by Canada's (RIM) for its secure corporate email service. What's more is that it has spurned RIM's technical solution for decoding all chat communication on the popular BlackBerry Messenger service...Reading between the lines, it sounds like RIM is still sticking to the fact that, thanks to end-user encryption, it simply can't reveal the message contents -- but it sounds like it agreed to offer access to other information, which the Indian government feels is not enough. Of course, for all of India's rather public admission that it wants to spy on all sorts of communications, it doesn't seem to recognize that it's scaring companies away from doing business in India, as the threat of having communications spied upon is too big a risk.
In an internal note, dated September 28, reviewed by ET, the telecom department's security wing claims security agencies have been unable to intercept or monitor secure email communication made through the (BES) in readable format. "RIM maintains that it does not have the keys that can be offered to security agencies for converting secure corporate email into readable format," said a senior DoT official with direct knowledge of the matter. The DoT internal note claims law enforcement agencies have failed to intercept chats on the BlackBerry Messenger platform, which runs counters to the home ministry's recent position that it is satisfied with the interception solution offered by RIM.
by Mike Masnick
Mon, Aug 2nd 2010 4:00pm
Filed Under:
blackberry, email, monitoring, saudi arabia, united arab emirates
Companies:
rim
by Mike Masnick
Tue, May 27th 2008 10:26am
Filed Under:
blackberry, email, encryption, india, snooping
Companies:
rim
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