Location-based Security for Wireless Apps 60
developerWorks writes "Studies by industry analysts forecast even greater demand for wireless and mobile devices, creating substantial opportunities for wireless device application and service providers. Faced with an increasingly difficult challenge in raising both average revenue per user (ARPU) and numbers of subscribers, wireless carriers and their partners are developing a host of new products, services, and business models based on data services. This article looks at location-based services, security, and how they boost both service and revenue."
My radio... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:My radio... (Score:2, Funny)
This reminds me of a company my friend used to work for. the companys main product was (is?) wireless hardware for net-access. His supervisor didn't always think everything throught.
Best example was once he stormed into the server room which was in middle of re-arragment and tripped on one ethernet cable that was laying near the doorway. The boss promptly proceeded to yank the cable out of the machine it was attached to, screaming: "What the f*ck is this!?! We are supposed to be WIRELESS!!".
Friend promised: "I will explain you as fast as you plug that back in, I believe few hundred of our customers don't want to wait till I explain to you exactly what that wire is for..."
Re:My radio... (Score:1, Funny)
Your keyboard is missing the U key. That salesman really fucked you this time. You should consider shopping elsewhere.
Not another buzzword (Score:3, Funny)
Faced with an increasingly difficult challenge in raising both average revenue per user (ARPU)
I swear, if ARPU becomes the next buzzword, I'll die!
Re:Not another buzzword (Score:3, Funny)
The most dangerous one: "business models" (Score:2)
Yes, I know its a b-school buzzword for explaining how specific industries or businesses operate, but even that informs me that there's not common sense, old-fashioned, buy low-sell high capitalism behind this idea, but instead there's a fast-buck, get-in-get-rich mentality behind it..
Re:Not another buzzword (Score:1)
While mobile communications are a partial extension of the internet, I cannot see why advertising wouldn't eventually appear in the wireless realm.
Re:Not another buzzword (Score:1)
Re:Not another buzzword (Score:1)
Re:Not another buzzword (Score:1)
Wireless and Global Positioning (Score:5, Interesting)
I can think of TONS of great apps that would be location specific. For instance, a GPS that would tell you where the nearest Pizza Hut is. A Or a two-way radio or other device that also told you WHERE the other person is. Paying tolls automatically is a good one too.
Re:Wireless and Global Positioning (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Wireless and Global Positioning (Score:1)
Re:Wireless and Global Positioning (Score:2)
It's OK for my wireless device to know (and tell others) where I am as long I can turn this service off any time I want to. I'm fine with a cellphone that transmits location info, but only if I can switch off this location transmission and still use the device as a regular cellphone. Otherwise I'll have problems with it.
I can think of TONS of great apps that would be location specific. For instance, a GPS that would tell you where the nearest Pizza Hut is. A Or a two-way radio or other device that also told you WHERE the other person is. Paying tolls automatically is a good one too.
Funny how location-based apps have trouble going beyond the insurmountable problem of locating the nearest Pizza Hut or the great idea of generating pop-up ads on your cell phone any time you walk past a store.
Note that my GPS can tell me where the nearest Pizza Hut is without transmitting my location to anyone.
If you have a two-way radio and you are in contact with that other person, why don't you just ASK him where he is??
Paying tolls also works quite well with very-short-range transmissions and, again, my location is usually stored in a database, but there is no need to transmit to anyone in real-time.
Location Based Security for Network Access??? (Score:1)
Re:Wireless and Global Positioning (Score:2)
Re:Wireless and Global Positioning (Score:2)
gonna take more than that... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:gonna take more than that... (Score:1, Funny)
Re:gonna take more than that... (Score:1)
>that I would not do on a public computer
You are right to say that wireless networks are far away nowadays for being a safe medium, but to compare with a public computer is going to far.
If you are protected by ssl (https, pops, ssh, imaps) your transactions are safe, but in a public computer risk are much bigger, as keyboards loggers.
Re:gonna take more than that... (Score:2)
Yup, and securing based on location can throw away the key benefit of wireless access. If you have to be in a particular area to access certain apps or information, what's the benefit of going wireless? Just hook up to a wire and get better bandwidth.
Yes, okay, it'd be nice wander all over our corporate headquarters and still keep access to my files and such, but Xterms and thin clients already offer that, with much less risk of wardriving.
Hrmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Not again (Score:2, Interesting)
Developing business models a la myextremefuneral.com? I hope all the VCs learned their lesson during the last gold rush: the only viable business model consists of selling a product or service for a profit.
Regardless of location, the screens are too small. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Regardless of location, the screens are too sma (Score:2, Funny)
We're working on that! The next generation of cell phones will have a second screen just for popups. Thanks for the tip--we're securing a patent at the present.
Love,The Industry
And yet... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:And yet... (Score:1)
Location information for security? (Score:2, Funny)
I can just picture it now-- I get my PIN wrong three times trying to check my bank balance, and two cops come over and arrest me.
Re:Location information for security? (Score:2)
So basically, (Score:4, Insightful)
out a way to stuff more features into wireless
computing so they can charge more for those features.
Also, (as mentioned by an earlier poster) they'll
have the ability to figure out where you are at
all times so they can specifically target you with
information that they think you'll need. Sounds like
doubleclick.net would love to get in on this. It would
be the next level in geek fetish toys. The ezpass
thing, (as said earlier) is cool though. Not to
mention:
Ads popping up as you drive by places telling you
what you should buy there. Example - You just passed Dick Monalds and our McRib is only a buck
today!
Or, Playing at the theatre today, this movie, that
movie. This cool one starts in 5 minutes!
As long as there are serious user controls, this
could be a cool thing. The interface is going to
have to be freaking stellar and unobtrusive to
keep people from sending their SUV's through
krogers when their cellphone, pager, and pda all
go off at once.
Re:So basically, (Score:5, Interesting)
Location based services is one of the features the product my company [meshnetworks.com] has developed offers. The concept is the same as with GPS, or triangulation in general. However, one thing calculating location within the network offers over GPS is the ability to calculate position relative to other users and/or infrastructure. This has amazing implications for use in automobiles and other transportation apps. When the Firestone tires on your SUV blowout, your car could signal back to other cars raising an alarm perhaps, warning other drivers, slowing down traffic, etc. It might even be the first step towards "smart highways".
And of course, if you are as directionally deficient as I am, knowing where you are all the time would be a good start =). Location information coupled with real-time, up to date maps would make sure I never get lost again.
Re:So basically, (Score:2)
a while ago. The idea was that your palm VII would
signal the airport billing system when you got there and automatically
get you a ticket on your prefered airline. We were
actually most of the way there until PSI.net starting
having delusions of granduer and bought metamore out
from under us. We even had a way figured out to make
the three different ticketing systems work together
seemlessly. I suppose someone smart could pitch
something like that today, and probably pull it
off in light of this slashdot story.
Re:So basically, (Score:2)
But if our laptops can get location data then we can have some fun. Want to see what films are on nearby? send a lat/long to IMDB and get a listing (they dont do this, though they did informally a while back). Want to know where your friends are: go to your IM server and check their locations. Better yet; your laptop can even change time zone based on where it is -wouldnt that be a good thing.
see my paper on [hp.com]
context aware laptops for more ideas.
-steve
Honestly... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Honestly... (Score:2)
Here is a little-known fact: THESE DEVICES CAN BE TURNED OFF. If you don't want to be reached, push that magical little button, et voila!
wrong formula, again (Score:3, Interesting)
whoa...hold the phone here. MUST it be both?
Why not:
(Good service + small fee per subscriber) * large # of subscribers = PROFIT.
Probably they just want to get as much as possible before the inevitable shredding party, SEC investigation, the jailing of the scape goats, the private island for the honchos, annd the abandonment of the public.
Screw long term growth. Get it now.
More acronyms! (Score:1)
I have something else that is average per user, but I don't think I can say it here.
How does this make it more secure? (Score:4, Insightful)
It is almost impossible to replicate location information and use it elsewhere to gain unauthorized entry. Even if the information is intercepted during communications, an intruder cannot replicate that data from some other place...
Why not? if I'm that bothered to gain access, surely I can cripple a device to generate bogus location information?
Location based services starting to look like HURD (Score:4, Interesting)
Finnish mobile phone manufacturer Benefon [benefon.com] has had a really cool phone, ESC [benefon.com]that combines GPS location, GSM and a map application -- and the phone is just not selling...
I starts to seem that the whole location based service concept is going to be the next WAP: over hyped and under utilized.
Re:Location based services starting to look like H (Score:1)
I don't know if there is anyone out there with more info, but isn't this exactly what Steve Wozniak is currently working on? That is the impression that I have received from his web-site [woz.com]. Does anyone out there have more info? I am far more interested in what Wozniak has cooking than all of the cell networks put together.
Location-based security? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Location-based security? (Score:1)
Re:Location-based security? (Score:1)
Never embraced this stuff (Score:1, Troll)
Between LEAP and every other 4 letter acronym that's supposed to be more secure, it's hard to even deploy a fairly secure wireless network without nearly shitting one's pants due to fear of such poor security.
Not to mention the fact that regardless of the fact that all the _clients_ are without wires, you still have to put dozens and dozens of the box transmitters all around, in the perfect locations, or else your entire wireless network will be _useless_.
Good info and examples (Score:3, Informative)
It's a good page to start from if the IBM article feels a bit dry.
Which studies? (Score:1)
Location information for mobile phones. (Score:3, Funny)
>Hello, I'm [here], where are you?
>Oh, I'm [here]
>Now I'm [here] can you see me.
>Sorry you broke up, what did you say?
>I'm [here], I can't see you.
etc...
It would be great if I had a phone which allowed my to find my friends. Of cousre the phone companies would hate it, they'd loss loads of $ on all those uncessary lengthy phone calls.
Re:Location information for mobile phones. (Score:1, Funny)
You must be one of those rare female Slashdot readers!
If someone called a male cellphone user about a breakup, only an awkward, embarrased silence would follow as the poor guy would desperately come up with an appropriate line.