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Josh Levy

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Apple's New iPhone Censors (Er, Sensors) Are Big Trouble

Posted: 06/20/11 04:32 PM ET

Apple has apparently filed a patent for software that would sense when iPhone users are trying to use their phone's camera at live events — and disable it.

The story has been mostly discussed in terms of how this "feature" would benefit promoters and broadcasters by limiting unauthorized videos of live events.

But my first thought was, "If concert promoters can block smartphone cameras, what's to stop governments from doing the same thing during protests and rallies?"

As we've seen in Egypt, Tunisia and elsewhere during this spring, images and videos taken with cell phones can be a powerful form of political speech — speech that must be protected at all costs.

This photo of Egyptians protesters charging their cell phones says it all:

If we grant governments, private companies and yes, concert promoters the power to block our ability to capture events as they unfold, that power will be abused in no time.

Mobile technology is the dominant technology of our time. Our smartphones are extensions of ourselves: They are becoming incredibly powerful tools for communication, education, political expression, community organizing and plain fun.

This fact, combined with Apple's new patent, makes it clear that the mere ownership of an iPhone or an Android phone is a political act. Given the empowering nature of these devices, governments and businesses are all too eager to gain control of everything you do with them.

This morning, Bryan Preston of Pajamas Media wrote:

I OWN the phone. Apple has no right to turn it off remotely. This opens up all sorts of disturbing possibilities, especially in totalitarian states, where the company might have an incentive to trade profits for personal liberty.

Meanwhile, mobile carriers
are consolidating their control. Wireless carriers like Verizon are blocking smartphone apps they don't like — even if that blocking is illegal — and AT&T is gunning for a takeover of T-Mobile that would create an unprecedented duopoly in the wireless market.

Now is the time for us to declare our independence from mobile carriers and manufacturers, and to make it clear that our access to data, devices, technology and networks — and our privacy — must be protected at all costs.

Take action now to urge Steve Jobs and company to pull the plug on this censorship technology.

 

Follow Josh Levy on Twitter: www.twitter.com/levjoy

 
 
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05:52 PM on 06/24/2011
It's becoming an increasingly convincing statement that private property is becoming a more important right than that of free speech. Even if it never was to get into the hands of totalitarian leaders, this technology could set a dangerous precedent of companies being allowed to use whatever technology the like to limit our ability to communicate with each other, especially in cases of emergencies that occur during mass gatherings, for instance, concerts. Here's a link to what I had to say on the matter: http://www.experts-exchange.com/blogs/mstanford12/B_5265-Now-Introducing-The-iHush.html
02:32 PM on 06/23/2011
I've been saying this for years. Apple is just another close minded company trying to make a buck. Pleasing their investors and creating a virtual sandbox with walls so the consumers can't see over into the open fields.
09:39 PM on 06/21/2011
Apple is getting scarier by the minute.
photo
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Channa
Everyone is entitled to my opinion.
08:00 AM on 06/21/2011
Back off Steve. Not cool.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ndem
02:53 AM on 06/21/2011
Big Bro digital apocalypse in 1s and 0s...it can all be wiped out like the Library at Alexandria, by the swipe of electro-magnetic waves...

keep using real film stock...buy real hard cover books

Virtual digital does not last

Revolutions are in the mind and experiences of those who live them
11:49 PM on 06/20/2011
Tom Crowl, Did you grow up in the San Fernando Valley?
11:48 PM on 06/20/2011
This comes up every year or so and a few people run around with their hair on fire. It never becomes part of a product because NOT having it would be a selling feature.

Breath, people.
09:25 PM on 06/20/2011
You are so right! Landscape shapes evolution! And we're in the midst of a crucial era where ICT (Information and Communication Technology) is revolutionizing our human social landscapes.

Paradoxically, while governments and corporations are powerful players in this critical and perilous evolution...

Two critical players are largely powerless... and dependent on the goodwill of those governments and corporations:

The Individual... and the Commons (the whole social body).

I suggest that there's a path via a commons-owned simple financial utility... which once offered will grow naturally... that may offer a strong base for those two neglected but vital constituencies.

Leveling The Transaction Landscape: Technology and the Campfire
http://culturalengineer.blogspot.com/2011/04/leveling-transaction-landscape.html
09:08 PM on 06/20/2011
back to a standalone unit!!