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Sunday 16 November 2014

Apple Iphone company a Danger for National Security

06:42

Apple Iphone company a Danger for National Security


Apple iPhone Chinese media has revealed that is threat for national security because of its ability to track user locations.Apple has frequently come under discussion from Chinese media, which revealed that company is providing user data to U.S. intelligence agencies. Apple Iphone also has been criticized before for poor customer service.
Broadcaster of CCTV criticized the iPhone’s “Frequent Locations” function for allowing users to be tracked their information.
“This is extremely sensitive information,” said a researcher interviewed in Talk show on CCTV . The researcher said “If the location of user were accessed, it could reveal an entire information about country’s economic situation and “even state secrets”But CCTV can’t called any Apple Representer for the solution of this problem & more information about this function.

iPhone (/ˈaɪfoʊn/ EYE-fohn) is a line of smartphones designed and marketed by Apple Inc. It runs Apple’s iOS mobile operating system. The first generation iPhone was released on June 29, 2007; the most recent iPhones, the seventh-generation iPhone 5C and iPhone 5S, were introduced on September 10, 2013..The user interface is built around the device’s multi-touch screen, including a virtual keyboard.
The iPhone has Wi-Fi and can connect to many cellular networks, including 1xRTT (represented by a 1x on the status bar) and GPRS (shown as GPRS on the status bar), EDGE (shown as a capital E on the status bar), UMTS and EV-DO (shown as 3G), a faster version of UMTS and 4G (shown as a 4G symbol on the status bar), and LTE (shown as LTE on the status bar).The Apple company is not the only U.S. firm to suffer from Chinese media displeasure.
Before this, Google have been disrupted in China for over a month, while the government has banned Microsoft Windows 8 operating system for new government computers.All this is due to U.S. spying revelations released last year by a former of U.S. National Security Agency.
An iPhone can shoot video (though this was not a standard feature until the iPhone 3GS), take photos, play music, send and receive email, browse the web, send texts, GPS navigation, record notes, do mathematical calculations, and receive visual voicemail. Other functions—video games, reference works, social networking, etc.—can be enabled by downloading application programs (‘apps’); as of October 2013, the App Store offered more than one million apps by Apple and third parties and is ranked as the world’s second largest mobile software distribution network of its kind (by number of currently available applications)

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