One of the new features in iOS 8, the latest update to Apple's mobile operating system for iPhone and iPad, seems to be a huge benefit for users who want to maintain their privacy: It randomizes (and therefore hides) the address of your device when your phone looks for wifi services.

The problem is, it mostly doesn't work, according to Bhupinder Misra, a principal systems engineer at AirTight Networks, a software/analytics company that provides wifi services for businesses.

The intention of the new privacy feature is to shield your phone from being identified as it probes for wifi signals that it can use to hook up to the internet or use to service its apps. (If you've ever left your wifi on and later discovered a long list of strange wifi services that your phone has tried to hook up to, this is what we're talking about.)

What Apple has done is randomize the MAC address of your phone, so that wifi providers can't identify your specific phone as it looks for a good signal. The MAC address is a unique string of characters that identifies your phone.

That sounds great, on paper. Everyone knows that hackers can use wifi signals to monitor your internet use. And in-store advertisers love to know that it's you, specifically, who has returned to the retailer once again, leaving the wifi on your phone in the "on" position, so they can target you with ads. Apple has been hailed in the tech press for increasing the privacy of its users.

The problem is that your iPhone needs to be in these three conditions for the phone to actually be anonymous to other people's wifi, according to AirTight:

  • Wifi must be on but not hooked up to an actual wifi service.
  • Phone needs to be in sleep mode.
  • Location services need to be OFF in the privacy settings.

Needless to say, almost nobody keeps their phone this way. Many of the most popular apps won't even work if you have location services off, and it's pointless if the protection ends as soon as you wake up your phone. An AirTight spokesperson told Business Insider that perhaps 99% of users won't be protected by the MAC randomization in iOS 8.

Here is what Apple officially says about the way MAC randomization works:

When iOS 8 is not associated with a Wi-Fi -- For more information read the original article here.

Apple is now allowing people to participate in its iPhone 5 Battery Replacement Program even if they've had their phone's display fixed using third-party components, according to a notice on the company's private website for service providers. The company's previous position was that it wouldn't replace batteries in phones that may have seen damage, and as such it required broken displays to be fixed first. If someone fixed a display on their own, though, Apple would deny them a new battery....






-- For more information read the original article here.
A bug involving the iOS App Store is causing it to display inappropriate apps under the various Kids categories, according to complaints. Browsing those categories' Top Charts sections, users can currently spot many apps that would normally fall under the All Categories umbrella. This includes obvious mistakes such as gambling and dating apps....






-- For more information read the original article here.
Extensis is tomorrow launching a new digital asset management (DAM) system, Extensis Portfolio. Aiming to provide a more affordable system for companies of all sizes, Extensis Portfolio allows users to holds millions of assets in one catalog or several, and can be used by multiple departments. Companies can choose what they will use with Portfolio's modular platform, with options for mobile DAM, single sign-on, web portals and more. The system's new "Restful" API provides simple integration with other third-party applications, such as eCommerce Systems, collection managements systems, and web...






-- For more information read the original article here.

In his first interview since joining Apple, industrial designer Marc Newson discusses his latest product – a domestic draft beer machine he says is the equivalent to a Nespresso coffee maker for beer lovers – and the future of the mechanical timepiece in the wake of the Apple Watch (+ interview + slideshow). (more...)

-- For more information read the original article here.
Supervalu and Albertson's shoppers may be in for another round of personal information theft notifications. The companies said that a second hack took place in late August or early September, with the company finding malicious software on systems that process credit and debit card sales at some of the company's 1,081 stores. Additionally, the malware was also found at Shoppers Food and Pharmacy, plus Shop 'n Save stores, but the company believes that the installation was not successful, and failed to capture payment data....






-- For more information read the original article here.
$100M worth of proprietary data on Xbox, Call of Duty, and other entertainment poached. -- For more information read the original article here.
Click to access the login or register cheese