intel ports jelly bean to atom – what’s next?

I was very intrigued by this story in PCWorld. The nub:

Intel is porting the Android 4.1 operating system, also called Jelly Bean, to work on smartphones and tablets using low-power Atom processors, the company said this week.

Not necessarily the port itself, but the possibility that they’ll go further. It seems like Android right now is used primarily for phones, tablets and appliances (like the Nexus Q), but I’m curious if a port to Atom is an early signal of things to come – perhaps the possibility of using Android as a desktop/laptop OS?

Oddly enough, while there would be, I think, a few obstacles, I can certainly picture Android starting to eat Window’s lunch, particularly with form factors like the Asus Transformer Infinity with a handy detachable keyboard. In fact, I’ve been starting to think whether it can replace my current Windows 7 tablet. It can’t. At least not all it’s functionality. But I can imagine that on the horizon. And I can certainly imagine that more clearly than I can Chromium OS or Chromebooks replacing Windows. Who buys those things anyway?

But who knows. I suppose this whole Windows 8 everywhere strategy is not just to try to grab a slice of the mobile/tablet market, but also, I’d assume as a defensive measure of sorts. Hmmm.

tweet digest for week ended 2012-07-22

legal to seize mobile phones, impersonate owner, in the us

Alas, I’ve been bad at this blogging thing of late. Much time spent on long-winded but half-completed posts. Too many other commitments, like those that put food on the table or make my kids happy. In any event, have decided to try another approach to get going again. Shorter (sometimes much shorter) entries noting an interesting story with at least some semblance of intelligent comment of some sort.

So without further ado, the story for today comes from Ars Technica. In brief, apparently there have been rulings in the US that have concluded that it’s perfectly legal for police officers to seize a mobile phone, without a warrant, and then use the information found on them, including sending communications from that phone pretending to be the owner.

The logic, from the article:

“There is no long history and tradition of strict legislative protection of a text message sent to, displayed, and received from its intended destination, another person’s iPhone,” Penoyar wrote in his decision. He pointed to a 1990 case in which the police seized a suspected drug dealer’s pager as an example. The officers observed which phone numbers appeared on the pager, called those numbers back, and arranged fake drug purchases with the people on the other end of the line.

A federal appeals court held that the pager owner’s Fourth Amendment rights against unreasonable search and seizure were not violated because the pager is “nothing more than a contemporary receptacle for telephone numbers,” akin to an address book. The court also held that someone who sends his phone number to a pager has no reasonable expectation of privacy because he can’t be sure that the pager will be in the hands of its owner.

Judge Penoyar said that the same reasoning applies to text messages sent to an iPhone. While text messages may be legally protected in transit, he argued that they lose privacy protections once they have been delivered to a target device in the hands of the police. He claimed that the same rule applied to letters and e-mail. (Police would still need to seize or search a phone or computer legally, and phones are much easier for cops to seize than computers, which generally require a warrant.)

“On his own iPhone, on his own computer, or in the process of electronic transit, Hinton’s communications are shielded by our constitutions,” he wrote, referring to both the state and federal constitutions. “But after their arrival, Hinton’s text messages on Lee’s iPhone were no longer private or deserving of constitutional protection.” Penoyar rejected Roden’s privacy arguments on similar grounds.

At first blush, I see this as a rather disturbing finding, particularly given the increasingly important role that mobile devices are playing. Can you imagine the implications of this ruling once devices such as Google’s Project Glass are in widespread use? I also do have some trouble with the logic. Suggesting that there is no reasonable expectation because the sender “can’t be sure that the pager will be in the hands of its owner” is, in my opinion, somewhat nonsensical and non-intuitive, particularly in a situation where the government is actively impersonating the owner of the phone.

I admit that I don’t have much sympathy for the individuals whose phones were seized in this particular case (drug dealers). But it doesn’t take much imagination to take the principles set out in these decisions and apply them to other, rather more disturbing scenarios.

it.can 16th annual conference

Does IT form a part of your practice area? If so, then you won’t want to miss IT.Can’s Annual Conference, taking place in Montreal this coming October 29-30.

The conference  offers an array of interesting, cutting edge IT, IP and related topics presented by distinguished speakers. The program will be accredited by the Bar of Quebec, British Columbia and New Brunswick for continuing legal education requirements. Registration is available for either one day or both days at a discount. Highly recommended.

For more information, take a look at the brochure (PDF). Or just go register.

tweet digest for week ended 2012-07-08

tweet digest for week ended 2012-07-01

  • quite disappointed that linkedin no longer picks up twitter feeds. #
  • they just keep coming – another recap on rim and how ms should buy it. http://t.co/C8gxdHww #
  • another reason to secure your wifi: swat won't storm your house with flashbangs. http://t.co/hEHPiAri #
  • another story on selling rim. apple? doubt it. ms? seems better. http://t.co/ObvJLhjz #
  • "microsoft should buy rim". makes a lot of sense, imho. http://t.co/8ASArbjk #
  • just heard that icann 45 will be here in toronto. are you going? hat tip @fmichlick http://t.co/PmYdxgjM #
  • ide in the cloud. neat. http://t.co/MoPTH4Yb #
  • was still around? wow RT @engadget: Minitel to be shut down tomorow: France bids adieu to the internet's precursor – http://t.co/n5n3YeqR #
  • best line i've read about the telecom class action: "they'll add the Lawsuit Recovery Fee to everyone's bill". http://t.co/G9T7qjbp #
  • rim had a really, really, really, really bad day. the delay of bb10 is particularly worrisome. http://t.co/kP8Emn45 #
  • the more i read about the google nexus q, the less i like it. good rundown by wired. http://t.co/QBpdjDmL #
  • predictive coding approved by a us court. http://t.co/iOlZb2XD #
  • so it's a bad thing that the nexus 7 is cheap? and ipad is good because it isn't? yeah, sure. if you say so. http://t.co/o0HzRXz6 #
  • looks like i wasn't the only one underwhelmed by yesterday's project glass demo. http://t.co/S36GM1ld #
  • underwhelmed by google glass demo. there's a camera. you can use it when skydiving. like any other camera. wow. #
  • comparison of jelly bean, ios 6 and win 8. useful. http://t.co/nFZJLBLg #
  • researchers design injectable oxygen. keeps you alive for 15 min w/o breathing. impressive. http://t.co/d7hJccRh #
  • how louis ck has taken the concept of disintermediation to heart. replicable by others? http://t.co/xx6CmpbP #
  • amazed at the level of bile and vitriol from not only carreon but now his wife. someone invoke godwin's law. http://t.co/NXEucKMu #
  • google's nexus 7 looks quite nice. rather underwhelmed by the nexus q. $300? seriously? #
  • frustrated by the lack of a write api for google+. grrr. #
  • researchers crack rsa securid in <15 min. requires access to token. http://t.co/HiK4UsJG #
  • spotted a fisker karma in the wild. looks nice, but still rather have a tesla model s. #

tweet digest for week ended 2012-06-24

  • watching the livestream for the first tesla model s deliveries. http://t.co/uZDplLmf. i'm definitely a fan. #
  • read popehat's coverage on the oatmeal/carreon thing. well worth the time. http://t.co/IBzPuV9o #
  • eff is now stepping in on the whole oatmeal/carreon/funnyjunk debacle. http://t.co/zazfE4YQ. #
  • how cool is this? sebastian thrun (google) teaches you how to program a self-driving car! http://t.co/ZLJv7FdC #
  • english translation of the original paper on the uncanny valley. a great read. http://t.co/a5bVxy0k #
  • eff survey on the extent to which sites protect your info from gov't demands. http://t.co/u717uRv6 #
  • quite a good article on the implications of self-driving cars. fascinating stuff. http://t.co/zE1iNIK9 #
  • 15 mbps is now considered "entry level" in the us. fios now up to 300 mbps. i'm living in the wrong country. http://t.co/ugjTfhVf #
  • wow. just wow. this is why some folks hate lawyers. the ongoing saga of oatmeal, funnyjunk and carreon. http://t.co/e2Z3DLoT #

presentation on development agreements

Alas, it has been far too long since I’ve posted anything. That being said, I have amassed a nice collection of half-completed posts which have all but lost any relevance or interest. Something I’ll need to work on, I suppose.

In any event, in case it might be of interest, I gave a presentation earlier today as part of the IT.Can – LSUC Annual Sprint IT Law Form. My piece was on development agreements. It was a relatively short presentation, so I only focused on a limited set of issues. I’ve perhaps done better in terms of delivery, but the slides [PPT] aren’t bad. Feel free to download and peruse.

tweet digest for week ended 2012-06-10