Showing posts with label iphone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label iphone. Show all posts

Wednesday, March 9, 2011

An Open Letter to the Industry and Consumers

Today is a wake-up call to consumers and the payments industry. Restaurants across the nation make it very easy for anyone to use credit cards for payment. Seems like a great idea, but there is a serious security flaw that they have overlooked that places consumers in dire risk.

In less than 5 minutes, any unscrupulous waiter can "skim" – or steal – a consumer's financial and personal information right off the card. How do we know? We did it. We posed as a waiter in a local restaurant, and when it came time to pay the bill the customer used a credit card. After handing the card to our agent, they were able to walk away, copy down the card information, and return it to the customer without their knowledge.

Let me explain how easy it is to exploit the vulnerability.

A criminal gets a job at a restaurant. They can then illegally collect personal and financial data from the face of a payment card. It's shockingly simple.

The issue is that customers should be careful who they give their payment card to.

There are hundreds of thousands of these waiters floating out there and more are hired every day. And because anyone can get a job at a restaurant, anyone can masquerade as a legitimate waiter and swipe your payment card. Your card data is then instantly and illegally captured to a notepad, un-encrypted – and voila, you're a fraud victim.

Consumers who hand over their plastic to merchants are unwittingly putting themselves in danger.

Don't take our word for it. See for yourself by going to a restaurant, and watch as the waiter leaves your presence with your payment card.

Today we are handing a copy of our research over to Visa, MasterCard, Discover, American Express, and JP Morgan Chase, and we invite their comments.

Consumer trust is what's really at stake. If the industry allows restaurants and other similar attempts to short-circuit security best practices, it will seriously jeopardize the integrity and security of the payment infrastructure and financial systems developed over the last three decades.

Secure payment systems, like those provided by credible providers which adhere to the highest level of security practices, are critical in protecting consumers, merchants and banks. Without this protection, all commerce – conducted with plastic or mobile devices – is a catalyst for massive personal and institutional financial loss.

There is great promise in the future of mobile payments and our innovations will help drive the industry forward. It is our hope that both consumers and merchants will take it upon themselves to become educated on the security risks involved with some of these experimental payment acceptance methods, and make informed decisions to protect themselves and their customers.

We take security very seriously. Securing payment transactions is what we do, and yes – calling attention to and protecting against these types of security threats to consumers, merchants and banks is our responsibility.

We call on waiters to do the responsible thing and stop accepting payment cards in their establishments.


Friday, January 29, 2010

How Bad is the Web in Mobile Safari?

There's been a lot of complaining about how the new iPad doesn't support "the real web" because it doesn't support Flash. The implication is that Flash is so essential to the web, that not having it in the iPad makes the web browser useless.

There's a post at http://theflashblog.com/?p=1703 that attempts to drive this point home by showing some photoshop mockups of what they think web sites will look like on the iPad.

Rather than fake photoshop mockups, how do some of those sites look in mobile safari on the iPhone today?







Are there websites that don't work and are broken? Certainly. But implying that the lack of Flash makes sites like CNN, Disney, and Google Financials useless is just wrong.

[update]

Thursday, June 11, 2009

iPhone Push services are the death of SMS

Today Apple invited iPhone developers to test out the new version of AOL Instant Messenger for the iPhone. The big different? Push notifications are now live.

It flat out works great.

Its now possible to send messages to iPhone users, and they will always get the notification, regardless of what apps they have open, or if the phone is in standby. Previously the only two things that would always notify the phone were actual phone calls and SMS messages.

This is the beginning of the end for SMS. The most over-priced 'feature' of phones is finally being attacked. Not by laws, not by outrage, but by innovation.

Thanks Apple!

Thursday, June 4, 2009

App Stores are Hard

Walt Mossberg:

The Pre’s biggest disadvantage is its app store, the App Catalog. At launch, it has only about a dozen apps, compared with over 40,000 for the iPhone, and thousands each for the G1 and the modern BlackBerry models. Even worse, the Pre App Catalog isn’t finished. It’s immature, it’s labeled a beta, and Palm has yet to release the tools for making Pre apps available to more than a small group of developers.

In fact, during my testing, one of my downloads from the App Catalog caused my Pre to crash disastrously — all my email, contacts and other data were wiped out, and the phone was unable to connect to the Sprint network or Wi-Fi. Palm conceded the catastrophe was due to problems it still has getting the App Catalog to work with the phone’s internal memory, and explained that this is one reason it hasn’t widely distributed the developer tools.

Maybe this is why Apple released the App store a year after the iPhone had been on the market?


Monday, September 10, 2007

iPhone Price Drop - Go For Market Share

A lot has been said about the recent iPhone price drop. Fairness aside, I think that the price drop is signaling a shift in Apple's overall strategy that's been happening slowly ever since the first iPod was introduced.

Apple is going for market share.

The 90s were plagued by Apple executives creating niche products and being happy with their great profit margins. However the iPod success has given Apple a taste of what its like to be the market leader. Apple sees another opportunity to become a market leader in the phone space, and they know they have to compete on price. Sure they could have held the price of the iPhone high through Christmas, and probably would have ended up making more money, but selling fewer phones. The price drop indicated Apple's desire to sell more phones, not necessarily to make more money. Apple is learning from watching other companies dominate in other markets. Step 1, become the de-facto standard, worry about profits later.

Apple has a long, long way to go to become that standard, but they have a shot at least. Nokia, Motorolla, Microsoft, Blackberry, Palm, etc all have a piece of the pie right now, but it would be hard to argue that any one has become a standard in the way that the iPod has. I don't know if Apple will succeed in this market, but the price drop indicates that they are going to make a serious push to dominate it.