Tuesday, March 29, 2016

PhoneAngel.com - FBI Hacks iPhone - Privacy Issues

FBI hacks iPhone: Does this make your phone less 
private?


Weeks of contentious debate weighing privacy rights against the government's need to investigate terrorism came to an end Monday when the FBI said it found a way to gain access to Syed Rizwan Farook's iPhone 5c.
The announcement may have staved off a historic court battle, but questions still linger about how the government gained access to the device and what implications the FBI's tactics will have beyond the investigation into the San Bernardino terror attacks.
How did the FBI get access to the data on Farook's phone?
Federal prosecutors did not offer many specifics. Apple and the Department of Justice were headed for a court battle last week before federal prosecutors made an eleventh-hour request for a delay, announcing that an outside group may have found a technique to hack the device.
The breakthrough came last weekend, according to an anonymous law enforcement official, who would not say how the device was hacked or what information the government found on Farook's iPhone.
Previously, the FBI had been stonewalled by an update Apple made to its encryption practices in September 2014. Farook had enabled an auto-erase feature that would permanently delete all data on the phone after 10 consecutive failed attempts to enter the device's password.
Data on the phone would be scrambled unless a correct password was entered, and Apple has repeatedly said it would need to create technology to defeat that encryption. Farook intentionally disabled the phone's iCloud backup feature six weeks before the Dec. 2 attacks, according to court documents.
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PhoneAngel.com - Stolen Phones - Crime Watch














Courtesy: Cleveland.com

Tuesday, March 22, 2016

PhoneAngel.com - Cell Phone Security Tips for Seniors

Smart cellphone security tips for seniors

Seniors are one of the five groups most at-risk for identity theft, according to a report from U.S. News & World Report. Because your cellphone or smartphone likely contains personal information about you that may include your name, home address, phone number and financial account information, a lost, stolen or hacked phone can be a treasure trove for criminals.

Consumer Cellular, which specializes in no-contract cellphone service and phones primarily for people 50 and older, offers some advice for securing your cellphone.

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PhoneAngel.com - New Apple iPhone SE

The 5 best things about Apple’s new iPhone SE – and the 2 worst things













Tuesday, March 15, 2016

PhoneAngel.com - Cell Phone Stories


Cell Phone Saves Lost Hikers: Santa Maria Teens Rescued After Getting Lost During a Hike

Santa Barbara County Sheriff's Search and Rescue team members worked overnight Sunday to rescue four lost teenage hikers in the Point Sal Beach/Mussel Point area west of Santa Maria.

The Sheriff's Office says that the 17-year-old male teens were on a late afternoon hike with the father of one of the teenagers. The father soon decided to hike back and waited for the teenagers. He spoke with the teens several times via cell phone. They told him they were heading back and were safe.

PhoneAngel.com - Lost Phone - Monkey Business

Monkey plays with zoo visitor's dropped cellphone