Showing posts with label Mobile Apps. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Mobile Apps. Show all posts

Saturday, February 1, 2020

Dating apps leak personal data, Norwegian group says


LONDON — Dating apps including Grindr, OkCupid and Tinder leak personal information to advertising tech companies in possible violation of European data privacy laws, a Norwegian consumer group said in a report Tuesday.

The Norwegian Consumer Council said it found “serious privacy infringements” in its analysis of how shadowy online ad companies track and profile smartphone users.


The council, a government-funded nonprofit group, commissioned cybersecurity company Mnemonic to study 10 Android mobile apps. It found that the apps sent user data to at least 135 different third party services involved in advertising or behavioral profiling.

“The situation is completely out of control,” the council said, urging European regulators to enforce the continent’s strict General Data Privacy Regulation, or GDPR. It said the majority of the apps did not present users with legally-compliant consent mechanisms.

The council took action against some of the companies it examined, filing formal complaints with Norway’s data protection authority against Grindr, Twitter-owned mobile app advertising platform MoPub and four ad tech companies. Grindr sent data including users’ GPS location, age and gender to the other companies, the council said.

Twitter said it disabled Grindr’s MoPub account and is investigating the issue “to understand the sufficiency of Grindr’s consent mechanism.”


Period tracker app MyDays and virtual makeup app Perfect 365 were also among the apps sharing personal data with ad services, the report said.

Match Group, owner of Tinder and OkCupid, said the company shares information with third parties only when it is “deemed necessary to operate its platform” with third party apps. The company said it considers the practice in line with all European and U.S. regulations.

The U.S. doesn’t have federal regulation like the GDPR, although some states, notably California, have enacted their own laws. Nine civil rights groups, including the American Civil Liberties Union of California, the Electronic Privacy Information Center, Public Citizen and U.S. PIRG sent a letter to the Federal Trade Commission, Congress and state attorneys general of California, Texas and Oregon asking them to investigate the apps named in the report.

“Congress should use the findings of the report as a road map for a new law that ensures that such flagrant violations of privacy found in the EU are not acceptable in the U.S.,” the groups said in a statement.

The FTC confirmed it received the letter but declined to comment further. The creators of the MyDays, Perfect 365 and Grindr apps did not immediately respond to requests for comment.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Tuesday, November 24, 2015

Google, Star Wars collaboration to ‘awaken the Force within’ apps


As the days leading to the opening of the latest Star Wars film seem like an eternity, Google gives fans a chance to fill that hunger with “Awaken the Force Within.”

“‘Awaken the Force Within’ is a global creative and technology collaboration between Google and Disney in celebration of the upcoming film set to open in theaters on Dec. 18th,” says a press statement by Google.


Choose your side

To get started, users need to first choose between the dark or light side through https://www.google.com/starwars/.

In a few minutes, users will see their skins or themes change as they log on to their apps.

Standard loading bars turn into a blue or red light saber for YouTube and Gmail, which also features a skin that shows stills from the movie. The same goes for the Chrome browser which opens with an image greeting in every new tab.

On Google Maps, the Pegman (for Google View) changes into “a new form as a First Order Stormtrooper or Resistance Pilot.” Users can navigate their destinations with “the help of a TIE fighter or X-wing.” The pin used to locate places also transforms into a light saber.

Key milestones

Google Calendar also keeps fans posted on “key movie milestones.” Android users will see a full transformation of Google Now where “cards automatically appear in your feed with ‘this day in Star Wars history’ fun facts.”

Other apps such as Waze and Translate will also get the Star Wars treatment.

In the coming weeks before “Star Wars: The Force Awakens” opens, Google and Disney will be rolling out more features on Cardboard, for a virtual reality experience, and Chrome Experiment. RC

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday, September 16, 2015

The top iPhone and iPad apps on App Store


App Store Official Charts for the week ending September 14, 2015:

Top Paid iPhone Apps:

    Minecraft: Pocket Edition, Mojang
    Heads Up!, Warner Bros.
    Five Nights at Freddys 4, Scott Cawthon
    Scribblenauts Remix, Warner Bros.
    Geometry Dash, RobTop Games AB
    Plague Inc., Ndemic Creations
    Goat Simulator, Coffee Stain Studios
    THE GAME OF LIFE Classic Edition, Electronic Arts
    Grand Theft Auto: San Andreas, Rockstar Games
    Bloons TD 5, Ninja Kiwi

Top Free iPhone Apps:

    Happy Wheels, Jim Bonacci
    Pop the Lock, Simple Machine, LLC
    Star Wars: Uprising, Kabam
    Slow Down, Ketchapp
    Billionaire., Alegrium
    Solitaire, MobilityWare
    Infinity Blade III, Chair Entertainment Group, LLC
    Perfect Shift, Lextre
    Piano Tiles 2 (Don’t Tap The White Tile 2), Cheetah Technology Corporation Limited
    Agar.io, Miniclip.com

Top Paid iPad Apps:


    Minecraft: Pocket Edition, Mojang
    Goat Simulator MMO Simulator, Coffee Stain Studios
    Five Nights at Freddys 4, Scott Cawthon
    Goat Simulator MMO Simulator, Coffee Stain Studios
    Terraria, 505 Games (US), Inc.
    Geometry Dash, RobTop Games AB
    Scribblenauts Remix, Warner Bros.
    I am Bread, Bossa Studios Ltd
    Five Nights at Freddy’s, Scott Cawthon
    Five Nights at Freddy’s 2, Scott Cawthon

Top Free iPad Apps:


    Star Wars: Uprising, Kabam
    Happy Wheels, Jim Bonacci
    Infinity Blade III, Chair Entertainment Group, LLC
    Sky Whale, Nickelodeon
    Perfect Shift, Lextre
    Agar.io, Miniclip.com
    World Craft – Dream Island, Bunbo Games
    GSN Grand Casino – Play Free Slots, Bingo, Video Poker and more!, Game Show Network
    Buddyman: Independence Kick, Crazylion Studios Limited
    Slow Down, Ketchapp

source: technology.inquirer.net

Saturday, September 12, 2015

Love at first click


After two years of unsuccessfully dating the conventional way, Hong Kong-based writer Wendy Tang finally decided to give dating apps a try.

“I used Lovestruck, OKCupid and Tinder. On OKCupid, there were always guys sending me weird messages. I paid for Lovestruck and went out on two dates, but there was no chemistry,” said Tang—now 30 and still single.

She found someone she liked on Tinder and they dated for three weeks. He was visiting Hong Kong at the time and had been trying to find new friends on Tinder. But the relationship did not work out.

Tang quit Tinder after about a year. “It’s quite boring,” she said. “I had to constantly swipe and look for possible matches and, even if we both liked each other, the conversation was always the same and meaningless, with a boring start and boring exchanges.”

Tinder is among the hottest dating apps nowadays, with an estimated 50 million active users worldwide.

Users get a limited number of matches sent to them every 12 hours and can swipe right to indicate they like the proposed match or left to reject. A private chatroom will be initiated if a mutual like happens.

In April, Tang followed a friend’s recommendation and started using Coffee Meets Bagel, which only delivers one “high quality” match—the “bagel”—each day. The app was founded in New York three years ago, and launched in Hong Kong last March after becoming hugely popular in the US.

Tang said she trusts the app more, as it refers to mutual friends on Facebook in proposing matches and constantly learns users’ preferences and alters the algorithm accordingly.

She went out on two dates recently with men she met through the app. “So far it’s not bad, but I have to wait and see,” she said.

Dawoon Kang, one of the three founders of Coffee Meets Bagel, feels the dating app market has become a frustrating place.

“Millennials are extremely busy, and no one wants to dedicate time to meeting some strangers—and if the date doesn’t work out, you feel like you’ve wasted a lot of time,” she said.

“Very often you spend a lot of time swiping on apps that never end up in fruition, which is an actual meet-up.”

In its three years, Coffee Meets Bagel claims to have facilitated over 25 million matches in the US, with more than 20,000 couples starting a relationship and 200 getting married or engaged. It also generated nearly 10,000 downloads in Hong Kong in three months.

Let’s do lunch

Another app with a similar “one match per day” approach, LunchClick, made its Hong Kong debut in June.

Its Singapore-based founder and a matchmaker, Violet Lim, set up matchmaking company Lunch Actually in 2004 in Singapore, and her company is now Asia’s premier dating agency.

Unlike Coffee Meets Bagel, there is no chat function on LunchClick. Instead, if both sides click to “like” each other, they will be interacting through a Q&A session, choosing from a question bank with more than 100 multiple-choice queries covering topics such as values, opinions, interests and aspirations.

The app has so far paired over 15,000 singles in Hong Kong, who have exchanged more than 32,000 Q&As, Lim said. “My experience in the matchmaking industry tells me singles don’t need chatting. They need to meet. So we designed an app that’s only for meeting. Chatting will never reduce the time before the final meet-up but only increase it,” she said.

Specially developed computer algorithms at the foundation of both apps help propose matches for users.

Studies by Coffee Meets Bagel in the US have found that if the two sides share mutual friends on Facebook, there is a 37 percent greater likelihood that they will end up meeting.

Its research also shows that Coffee Meets Bagel users based in Hong Kong have as many as 768 Faceook friends on average, compared to a global average of over 200. Other factors such as the member’s age, education level, religious and other preferences are also taken into account in Coffee Meets Bagel’s algorithm.

For LunchClick, it is mutual values that matter most. Lim said the matchmaking industry is never about just matching interests or ensuring business complementarity, or working on the principles of opposites attract—such as matching introverts with extroverts.

Instead, it is similar perspectives on issues such as family and money that lead to a happy and lasting relationship or marriage, she noted.

The computer algorithms are constantly modified and updated based on user feedback and reactions toward proposed matches.

This way, the apps are more likely to get a precise idea of individual preferences and pick matches based on the choices they actually make instead of what users may say they like.

However, can big data really help people find their significant other on a mobile platform? Denise Tang Tse-shang, assistant professor of Sociology at the University of Hong Kong, pointed out that in the final analysis computers can never make decisions for people.

“Technology has enabled us to chat with strangers online without any emotional boundaries. But speaking of meet-ups, there should be no direct judgment on whether different apps are effective or not—as the users themselves will have to make the final decision while taking into account any possible risks,” she said.

That is probably why both apps have labeled themselves as “female-centric,” and they use multiple approaches to filter out fake accounts by verifying every new registration case by case.

Hong Kong’s lopsided gender ratio of 858 men to 1,000 women might have had an impact on the dating dynamics of the city, with Coffee Meets Bagel’s survey revealing 62 percent of women find dating in Hong Kong difficult, compared to only 45 percent of men.

It also found that in general users of both genders in Hong Kong will like one out of three matches they get.

LunchClick, on the other hand, spotted that while there are more women customers for Lunch Actually’s offline services, the app ended up showing a reversed gender split.

As technology progresses and more new ideas appear, Kang predicts an eventual transformation of the matchmaking industry.

“Several types of dating services are about to be eliminated, as there will be greater proliferation of quality matchmaking. One is the subscription model. There is no reason to pay 60 dollars a month for a service that doesn’t guarantee any results,” Kang forecast.

“Besides, although I still can see value in the traditional matchmaking services because they’re more discreet, eventually technology will replace them.” But traditional matchmakers are not intimidated by the high-tech competition.

“The human relationship between men and women is far more complicated and unpredictable than we think,” said Rachael Chan, founder of Rachael and Smith Matchmakers, a local agency.

“Those who claim to have no time to look for dates, and those who are truly buried in their work, which leads to their remaining single, won’t spend one hour on apps after they get off work.”

Either way, love is not found in a rush. Wendy Tang said she would rather spend more time on having a healthy work-life balance, which she considers the most effective way to meet new faces. To her, apps are no more than just another ordinary platform to find love.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday, May 6, 2015

The Periscope effect on the Pacquiao-Mayweather fight


WASHINGTON–The boxing match billed as the fight of the century is over, but the battle over smartphone video streaming of the Las Vegas showdown is just beginning.

Revelations that dozens of smartphone users streamed the Manny Pacquiao-Floyd Mayweather weekend fight have raised questions about how new technologies can get around copyright restrictions imposed at live venues such as sporting events and concerts.

There are no reliable figures, but thousands of people may have watched the fight via the Twitter-owned app Periscope, which allows any smartphone user to “broadcast” live video, and independent app Meerkat.

These viewers avoided the $100 fee for official pay-per-view video — as long as they did not mind reduced picture quality.

Twitter chief executive Dick Costolo appeared to boast about the feat when he tweeted at the end of the match, “And the winner is… @periscopeco.”

It highlights the conundrum copyright holders could face if they lose control of their rights to fans with smartphone apps.

Similar questions arose last month when HBO sent notices to Periscope over piracy of its “Game of Thrones” series. And these issues are expected to multiply as smartphone streaming gains popularity.

Acting ‘expeditiously’

Under US copyright law, tech firms have a responsibility to remove copyrighted content “expeditiously” when notified of a violation. But at a live event, it’s not clear how fast is fast enough.

“The law really does not have the tools for copyright owners to go after platforms that have content that is live streamed,” said Bradley Shear, a Washington-area attorney specializing in social media and copyright issues.

The debate over these streaming apps “is going to restart the conversation about copyright protection in the digital age,” Shear told AFP.

Periscope and Meerkat say in their terms of service that they do not allow streaming of copyrighted content. But because there is no clear definition of “expeditious” the law may have been rendered useless by technology, according to Shear.

“This demonstrates the need to revisit our copyright law,” he said.

Eric Goldman, co-director of the High-Tech Law Institute at Santa Clara University, agreed that when Congress wrote the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in 1998, “it did not contemplate live streaming.”

Goldman noted that copyright holders could in theory sue those who carry out the streaming, the viewers and the platforms such as Twitter.

But such litigation is unlikely after the fact, especially since the law allows tech firms “safe harbor” protections if they respond to takedown requests.

Goldman said some technology firms have gone beyond the law to help copyright owners, by setting up filters and using other means to block illegal videos or at least prevent them from being discovered in a search.

‘We were ready’

Periscope founder Kayvon Beykpour said at the TechCrunch Disrupt conference Tuesday that his team was “completely prepared” for the welterweight mega-fight, with a team of people scanning for emails about potential problems.

“We had 66 requests for takedown and we took down 30 of them, all in a matter of minutes,” Beykpour said. The others could not be removed, he said, because they had ended by the time the team could deal with them.

“We were ready, we knew we had to be well-staffed,” he said.

On the broader question, Beykpour said the issue of copyright infringement is overblown because of the relatively poor quality of video on these feeds.

“No one wants to watch ‘Game of Thrones’ on Periscope,” he said.

HBO and Showtime, which managed pay-per-view television for the Pacquiao-Mayweather clash, declined to comment.

But sources familiar with the matter said the newer platforms like Periscope lack the systems adopted by YouTube and others where copyright owners are allowed to log in as special users and instantly remove content.

That means each request must be managed individually, which can often mean action is taken too late.

Fight promoter Top Rank meanwhile said it takes the issue seriously and is considering legal action.

“We are always pursuing, watching out for piracy,” Top Rank president Todd duBoef said.

“We think anyone redistributing unauthorized streaming is cheating. They don’t have the right to distribute. We want a thorough report on how many streams are out there.”

source: technology.inquirer.net


Saturday, October 18, 2014

Top 8 enterprise network infrastructure, security trends for 2015


MANILA, Philippines – The networking and security industries are evolving rapidly. Listed below are considered some of the most important developments and technologies to look out for in 2015.



    Security breaches are harder to stop

Security breaches and data leakage will continue to trouble companies of all sizes. The threat timeline over the last 10-15 years has shown that a new threat tends to be quickly answered by a new defence system. The threat then evolves, and a new defence system is needed. This has led to a myriad of disparate security appliances, software agents and management systems that in many cases are unable to talk to one other. When the bad guys tweak the Threat Life Cycle, for example via the creation of Advanced Persistent Threats or APTs, it becomes very difficult to stay ahead of the curve. Next-generation security architectures will integrate discrete security systems into a platform, which can correlate threat life elements and break the infection chain in different places.

2. Cloud technologies are finally taking root

All forms of cloud are starting to make inroads as a viable part of the enterprise infrastructure. Software as a Service (SaaS) has reached a tipping point as most organizations trust a provider’s security capabilities. Infrastructure as a service (IaaS) is still focused on web applications for elasticity and redundancy. Cloud bursting, hybrid clouds and personal clouds will mean more sharing of distributed services, management and security.

3. Diversity in mobile apps and management

Unlike the PC market, the mobile device market (handsets and tablets) will not be dominated by Microsoft. There will be at least two to three platforms across the globe. This mobile diversity will mean management systems will need to be more flexible and open. Improved JavaScript performance will begin to push HTML5 and the browser as a mainstream enterprise application development environment. This will lead to richer applications and more focus on their usability, rather than larger and cumbersome applications.

4. Software defined modular infrastructure becomes the norm

The control layer is being detached and centralized for many different parts of the infrastructure. Most of the initial focus is on the data center with virtualization, Software Defined Networking (SDN), Software Defined Storage (SDS) and standalone switch fabrics. The effect is that API’s are being consumed at a much higher rate. In a world where the infrastructure is being dissected and segmented, API’s themselves are very important but is also a potential security hole to the network element.

5. Internet of Things and Industrial Control Systems (ICS) collide


The Internet of Things (IoT) is already estimated by Gartner to be made up of some 26 billion devices by 2020. Industrial control systems are rolling out IP all the way to the control and measurement points. These networks are separate today and individual in nature. However, both need to deal with cyber threats, which can cause huge damage across industrial complexes, public operational networks (i.e. power grids) or consumers.

6. Wireless continues to replace wired access

Wireless access is ubiquitous across most organizations. New enterprise buildings are less and less wired. Wireless systems are becoming the primary network access control mechanism, meaning that tight integration with authentication systems is essential. Wireless technology itself continues to improve with ac Wave 1 now rolling out rapidly and Wave 2 on the horizon in 2015.

7.  Networking bandwidth continues to double every 10 months

Networking bandwidth requirements continue to expand at a rapid pace. The transition from 1G data centers to 10G data centers took about 10 years. The transition from 10G to 100G will be much faster. All parts of the infrastructure need to perform within the high-speed infrastructure. Traditionally CPU-based firewalls have fallen way behind the performance curve. More recently ASIC-based firewall appliances have taken a quantum leap in performance, allowing 100G interfaces and throughput in the hundreds of Gbps, saving space and power. Now high-speed networks can design security into the architecture without creating bottlenecks.

    Analytics for everything that’s attached to the network

Big Data and analytics can be applied for different reasons. The biggest need is business intelligence but it’s also very important for security.  The amount of data being gathered is staggering but segmenting the data can lead to more actionable results. For example, collecting WiFi presence of consumers in retail stores can lead to understanding their buying behavior. Monitoring where and when clients connect to the network can help determine security posture. Forecasting shipments based on real time data can lead to more efficient operations. Jeff Castillo, Country Manager, Fortinet PH

(Jeffrey Castillo joined Fortinet in the Philippines in October 2009. He has extensive industry knowledge and selling experience in providing end-to-end hardware and software solutions to key verticals. Castillo also has a solid foundation in technology implementations, having been a technical engineer at the start of his career.)

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday, August 27, 2014

Instagram launches time-lapse video app for iPhone


SAN FRANCISCO–Facebook-owned photo-sharing service Instagram on Tuesday launched an application for capturing time-lapse videos using Apple mobile devices.

The Hyperlapse ”app” was designed to let people easily make high-quality time-lapse videos even while moving around with a smartphone, according to Instagram.

Hyperlapse videos can be saved on mobile devices and shared on Instagram.

“From documenting your whole commute in seconds or the preparation of your dinner from start to finish to capturing an entire sunset as it unfolds, we’re thrilled about the creative possibilities Hyperlapse unlocks,” Instagram said in a blog post.

Hyperlapse applications were made available only for mobile devices powered by Apple software.

Market research firm eMarketer said in a report in March that nearly 35 million people in America accessed Instagram at least once each month as of the end of 2013, a jump of more than 30 percent from a year earlier.

And the report said nearly 25 percent of smartphone users in the United States will use Instagram at least once a month by the end of this year — bringing the total user base to more than 40 million.

Instagram in November began displaying ads as Facebook moved to start making money from the smartphone photo sharing service it bought in a billion-dollar deal in early 2012.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Sunday, August 17, 2014

Mom creates phone-locking app to force kids to return parent’s calls


MANILA, Philippines—Is this an invasion of the kids’ privacy or a method of strict but good parenting?

A mother in the United States has developed a mobile application (app) that guarantees kids will answer their parents’ texts and calls. The app was launched on Saturday.

Ignore No More, an app developed by Sharon Standifird from Texas, enables parents to lock the phones of their children if they think they are ignoring their texts and calls.

Standifird revealed in a televised interview that the parents, through this app, can take away texting, calling, gaming, and internet-surfing from their kids.

In order to use the app, it must be installed first to the phones of both the parents and their children. Then, once installed, parents can open the app on their smartphone, and click the name of their child. Next, they will have to enter the unlock code twice and then click to lock their child’s phone.

The child’s phone will be locked and with a single tap, and a list of contacts approved by the parent will appear. The child should then call someone from the contact list in order to get the password that will unlock the phone.

The app will enable kids to call 911 and once installed, Ignore No More cannot be disabled.

Ignore No More is currently available for $1.99 to US citizens and will only operate on Android-supported phones. A version for iPhone is underway.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Monday, February 10, 2014

Game over for Flappy Bird


HANOI, Vietnam – The young Vietnamese creator of hit mobile game Flappy Bird has removed it from the App Store and Google Play saying it ruined his life.

The game which was uploaded in 2013 but only surged to the top in downloads earlier this year was removed early Monday.

The success of the game that based its appeal on being simple and also maddeningly difficult made its creator Nguyen Ha Dong, 29, a minor celebrity.

The game was downloaded more than 50 million times on App Store alone. In an interview with The Verge website, Dong said Flappy Bird was making $50,000 a day in advertising revenue.

But tech blogger Carter Thomas said the sudden popularity of Flappy Bird might have been due to use of fake accounts run by computers to create downloads and reviews.

Thomas said he couldn’t prove his suspicion and that the success of Flappy Bird might also be explained by it being “just a wildly viral game.”

Dong, from Hanoi, wrote on Twitter on Saturday that the Internet sensation caused by the game “ruins my simple life” and he now hated it.

“I will take Flappy Bird down. I cannot take this anymore,” he wrote.

Dong had agreed to talk to The Associated Press about the game in an interview scheduled for Friday, but canceled.

On Twitter he didn’t address the inflated downloads allegation but denied suggestions he was withdrawing the game because it breached another game maker’s copyright.

“It is not anything related to legal issues. I just cannot keep it anymore,” he wrote.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Wednesday, February 5, 2014

‘Flappy Bird’ on FB


MANILA, Philippines — The harbinger of doom has spread its wings and conquered another world, the world of social media.

After sweeping the mobile apps world like a winged plague, Flappy Bird has landed on Facebook Tuesday and has, as of posting time, 262 “likes.”

Just as the 8-bit avian menace moves on tablets and smartphones through single-taps, the Facebook counterpart moves on single-clicks.

The same green pipes are still the main obstacles for the anger-inducing bird’s horizontal world.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Friday, January 3, 2014

Snapchat hackers post phone numbers of 4.6M users online


PARIS—Hackers broke into Snapchat, the hugely popular mobile app, accessing the phone numbers and usernames of 4.6 million users and publishing them online, tech news website TechCrunch has announced.

The numbers were partially masked when they were briefly published on SnapchatDB.info, and the unidentified hackers told TechCrunch they had done this “to convince the messaging app to beef up its security.”

Snapchat, which allows people to send smartphone photos or video snippets timed to self-destruct 10 seconds or less after being opened, has become hugely popular among teenagers who are easing away from Facebook.

But Australian firm Gibson Security warned last week that glitches in the application could be exploited by hackers.

“Our motivation behind the release was to raise the public awareness around the issue,” the hackers said in a statement, published on TechCrunch late Wednesday.

“It is understandable that tech startups have limited resources but security and privacy should not be a secondary goal. Security matters as much as user experience does.

“You wouldn’t want to eat at a restaurant that spends millions on decoration, but barely anything on cleanliness.”

Created by students at Stanford University in 2011, Snapchat reportedly rejected a $3 billion takeover offer from Facebook last year.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Google drives huge chunk of online traffic


SAN FRANCISCO—Network analytics specialty firm DeepField on Monday said that Google accounts for nearly a quarter of Internet traffic in North America.

“Based on measurements of end devices and user audience share, Google is now bigger than Facebook, Netflix and Twitter combined,” DeepField chief Craig Labovitz said in a blog post.

While popular online video streaming service Netflix has larger bandwidth than Google, peak traffic levels last for a few hours each evening while about 60 percent of all Internet-linked devices exchange information with Google servers in North America every day, according to DeepField.

The analysis included traffic from computer Internet browsers as well as mobile applications and “embedded devices” such as Apple TV, Roku, and videogame consoles, according to DeepField.

source: technology.inquirer.net

Monday, February 27, 2012

Ford puts phone apps in the driving seat

Barcelona, Spain (CNN) -- Not content with revolutionizing smart phones, mobile apps now appear to be in the driving seat of the auto industry as manufacturers increasingly surrender control of their vehicles to technology.

Signs of the increasing dominance of the app came on Monday with Ford's decision to launch its newest B-Max compact at Mobile World Congress -- a phone industry gathering in Barcelona -- rather than a motor show.


source: http://edition.cnn.com/2012/02/27/tech/mobile/ford-mobile-technology/index.html