Tag Archives: text

Android Malware Intercepts Text Messages, Forwards To Criminals

An anonymous reader writes “A new piece of Android malware has been discovered that can intercept your incoming text messages and forward them on to criminals. Once installed, the trojan can be used to steal sensitive messages for blackmailing purposes or more directly, codes which are used to confirm online banking transactions. The malware in question, detected as “Android.Pincer.2.origin” by Russian security firm Doctor Web, is the second iteration of the Android.Pincer family according to the company. Both threats spread as security certificates, meaning they must be deliberately installed onto an Android device by a careless user.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Ask Slashdot: Why Do Firms Leak Personal Details In Plain Text?

An anonymous reader writes “Having entered my personal details (full real name, home address) to websites with an ‘https://’ prefix in order to purchase goods, I am still being sent emails from companies (or their agents) which include, in plain text, those same details I have entered over a secure connection. These are often companies which are very keen to tell you how much they value your privacy and how they will not pass your details on to third parties. What recourse does one have to tell them to desist from such behaviour whilst still doing business with them if their products are otherwise desirable? I email the relevant IT team as a matter of course to tell them it’s not appropriate (mostly to no avail), but is there any legislation — in any territory — which addresses this?”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Over the top: Internet chat via apps will double text messages sent in 2013

In 2013, the number of messages sent via chat app will hit 41 billion per day, more than double the number of text messages sent globally, according to data from Informa.
Computerworld News

Clipr sends pasted text to your phone via SMS with a press of a button

Clipr sends pasted text to your phone via SMS with a press of a button

If you’ve ever wanted to send some text from your computer to your phone, you usually have to go with a dedicated app like Evernote, with a mobile app required at the other end. With the new version of Clipr for Mac, however, all you need to do is enter your phone number in the settings and the info will magically appear on your mobile device via SMS — just press the command key when selecting a clip and away it’ll go. Right now all major US carriers are supported, with the promise of more to come. For the uninitiated, Clipr is a clipboard manager that works with your computer’s existing copy and paste system without any special key combos. Bear in mind that while the app itself is free, the aforementioned SMS feature costs $ 0.99 extra. Still, at least this particular clip-inspired helper looks to be a lot better than, you know, that other one.

Filed under: , ,

Comments

Source: Clipr (Mac App Store)

Engadget RSS Feed

EFF Urges Court To Protect Privacy of Text Messages

netbuzz writes “The police in Washington state arrested a suspected drug dealer, rummaged through the text messages on his phone, responded to one message while pretending to be the suspect, arranged a meeting, and then arrested the recipient of the text — all without a warrant. The state argues – and an appeals court majority agreed – that both suspects had neither a legal expectation of privacy nor Fourth Amendment protection because both considerations evaporate the moment that any text message arrives on any phone. The Electronic Frontier Foundation is urging the state’s Supreme Court to overturn that decision and recognize that ‘text messages are the 21st Century phone call.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Samsung infringed Apple patent on text selection, says ITC judge

A handful of Samsung smartphones infringe an Apple patent on text selection, according to the initial determination of a U.S. International Trade Commission judge.
Computerworld News

Encoding.com Adds Dynamic Text Overlays To Its Cloud Encoding Platform

encoding logoEncoding.com is trying to add a few features that will set it apart from the competition. One of these features is dynamic text overlays, which was showed off as part of a Google Hangout campaign late last year. For the Google campaign, the dynamic text overlay was part of a custom workflow that Encoding.com worked on to enable the custom message.
TechCrunch

Congress asked to require logs of Americans’ text messages

Silicon Valley firms and privacy groups had hoped to convince Congress to update a 1986-era electronic privacy law. But if a law enforcement idea scheduled to be presented today gets attached, support for the popular proposal would erode. [Read more]


CNET News

Samsung Pumps Up The Galaxy S 4′s Keyboard With Some Of SwiftKey’s Text Input Tech

swiftkey_flowContinuing the litany of neat things in the Galaxy S 4 that Samsung didn’t talk about during its grand (some would say overproduced) unveiling last night, the smartphone’s keyboard has gotten a boost thanks to some prominent text input buffs. According to Swiftkey co-founder Dr. Ben Medlock, the U.K. startup’s keyboard tech is “at the heart of” Samsung’s new flagship.
TechCrunch

Shape-shifting Jesus described in ancient Egyptian text

A newly deciphered Egyptian text, dating back almost 1,200 years, tells part of the crucifixion story of Jesus with apocryphal plot twists, some of which have never been seen before.


FOX News

FTC Goes After Scammers Who Blasted Millions of Text Messages

coondoggie writes “The Federal Trade Commission today said it has filed eight court cases to stop companies who have sent over 180 million illegal or deceptive text messages to all manner of mobile users in the past year. The messages — of which the FTC said it had received some 20,000 complaints in 2012 — promised consumers free gifts or prizes, including gift cards worth $ 1,000 to major retailers such as Best Buy, Walmart and Target.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Ask Slashdot: Best Pay-as-You-Go Plan For Text and Voice Only?

sconeu writes “My wife uses an assistive communication device. She wants to use it for SMS texting… We currently have Verizon, so we don’t have a SIM. The computer will take a SIM. I’m looking for a pay-as-you-go plan where I can take the SIM from a cheap phone and put it in her computer. Any suggestions?” It would be interesting to hear how this question would be best answered both in the U.S. and around the world.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.




Slashdot

Open Garden And TextMe Team Up So Android Tablet Users Can Text, Call, & Video Chat Even When They Don’t Have A Signal

Open Garden - Android Apps on Google PlayOpen Garden, the TechCrunch Disrupt New York 2012 battlefield finalist which allows users to share their wireless data connections with others, is today announcing its first partnership with another software company, TextMe, a mobile communications app with over 8 million users. The deal will allow users of TextMe on Android tablets the ability to text and make voice or video calls using their tablet, even when they don’t have a Wi-Fi connection present.

TechCrunch

Yammer Competitor Jostle.me Raises $3.1M For Enterprise Sharing Platform Anchored By Pictures, Not Text

jostlelogoYammer competitor Jostle.me has raised $ 3.1 million from a group of angel investors.  The company has raised $ 4.6 million to date, all from private individuals. It has 52 shareholders, including most employees who work for the company and its directors.
TechCrunch

Hppy bthdy txt msng! The text turns twenty today

Text messaging, or txt msng, if you like, turns 20 today. But the tech did not originate from some high-tech lab in Silicon Valley. The world’s first SMS came from an office park in England.




FOX News

Text messaging on decline for first time ever

Ever since SMS was first conceived, it has become an unstoppable force that has been taking over voice calling as the number one way to communicate with someone over mobile devices. However, for the first time ever, text messaging volume in the US has declined according to a new research report from Chetan Sharma Consulting.

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Papa John’s pizza up against $250M lawsuit for text spam

Former customers claim that the pizza chain used a mass text messaging service to send out hundreds of thousands of text advertisements even though they never opted-in for the messages. [Read more]


CNET News

US mobile users sending fewer text messages: 678 per month

Anyone who finds it hard to believe that the average U.S. mobile subscriber sent 696 text messages per month in the second quarter of this year may be relieved to know that this figure fell to 678 per month in the third quarter.
Computerworld News

Verizon waives voice and text charges for Sandy victims

Verizon has done a lot of great things to help with the recovery effort after Hurricane Sandy, and today it added one more altruistic thing to its list. The company announced that customers living in some areas hit hard by Sandy won’t be charged for voice and text usage for the period spanning October 29

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

The Text Message Typo That Landed a Man In Jail



Barence writes “A British man was jailed for 18 months for accidentally sending an explicit text message to his entire address book. 24-year-old swimming coach Craig Evans intended to send a text message to his girlfriend asking her for sex. Instead, the message was accidentally sent to his entire BlackBerry address book, including two girls, aged 13 and 14, from his swimming class. He was subsequently arrested and charged with ‘causing or inciting a child to engage in sexual activity,’ and – incredibly – jailed for 18 months at Birmingham Crown Court in July. Yesterday, an appeal’s court freed Evans, although he wasn’t cleared — the sentence was merely reduced to a nine-month suspended jail term.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Phony Al-Jazeera text messages sent by pro-Syrian gov’t hackers

Network’s short messaging service compromised and used to send false news reports, including a report that Qatar’s prime minister had been assassinated.
[Read more]
CNET News

Proxy ports showing formatted text in Mountain Lion

An interface bug in the OS X Network system preferences shows unconventional port string formats, but does not affect OS X performance.
[Read more]
CNET News

Publishers, We Need To Talk: Text From Dog Gets A Book Deal

new_back2Look guys and gals in publishing, sit down. You can bring in your Coco Water. Totally. Yeah. We have some gluten-free sandwiches coming in and I promise this won’t effect summer hours. You can still not come in on Friday. Yeah, you can take off your loafers. Whatever.

Ok. I know you’re confused and hurting. Revenues are falling and ebooks are killing your old surefire model of shipping books in big boxes to big stores where they were remaindered and sent back for pulping. We had some good times. Remember all that money you made on cookbooks? Before the Epicurious app? Good times. That shit paid for your house on the Vineyard.

TechCrunch

Late again? Twist will text or e-mail your apology

A start-up hopes to capitalize on a basic chore: telling people when you’re going to arrive. An iPhone app will be followed by an Android version later.
[Read more]
CNET News

RIM gets patent for logic-based text prediction, BlackBerry 10 keyboard now preserved for the ages

RIM gets patent for logicbased text prediction, BlackBerry 10 says hello

For those of us who aren’t fans of swipe gestures, the highlight of BlackBerry 10 is undoubtedly a unique keyboard that’s often a step ahead of its user. It’s a good thing for this last camp that RIM was just granted the final version of a related patent for logic-based text prediction. Instead of simply hunting for typos, the patented keyboard guesses the next word based either on the context of the words around it or on other criteria, like common expressions. About the only time the technique doesn’t predict words is for passwords — RIM would rather not be that clever. While there looks to be a few differences in the practical implementation of the patent as we’ve seen it in a pre-release BlackBerry 10, theory and reality are close enough that RIM won’t be worried about anyone else poaching its seemingly mind-reading technology anytime soon.

Filed under:

RIM gets patent for logic-based text prediction, BlackBerry 10 keyboard now preserved for the ages originally appeared on Engadget on Tue, 17 Jul 2012 22:13:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceUSPTO  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Carriers hesitant toward text donations to Romney, Obama

If you were hoping that perhaps some day you would be able to send a donation to your favorite political candidate by sending a text message, there is some unfortunate news for you. It appears that, even though the Federal Election Commission approved this kind of mobile donation, getting major carriers to set up the

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

You have a new text: Time to get water

Water supplies are unreliable throughout much of the developing world. The organization NextDrop aims to alert families via SMS when it’s time to fill their pails.
[Read more]
CNET News

Verizon launching shared data plans June 28; part of voice, text sharing plans

After years of study, Verizon Wireless Tuesday unveiled a shared data plan that works across 10 Verizon devices.
Computerworld News

Wibbitz Raises $2.3M Series A For Technology That Turns Text Into Videos

wibbitz-logo
Wibbitz, a company whose tagline calls it the “play button for the web,” has just closed a $ 2.3 million Series A round headed up by Horizons Ventures, the internet and technology investment fund belonging to Li Ka-shing. Also participating in the round were previous investors, Initial Capital and lool Ventures.

The service is somewhat similar to former TechCrunch Disrupt winner Qwiki, as it also automatically generates videos based on the content found on websites, but the twist is that it’s designed for use by publishers who want to offer quick, digestible video summaries of their articles’ content.
TechCrunch

Are people more honest when they text?

A study at the University of Michigan suggests not only that we are likely to tell the truth when we let our fingers do the talking, but that we’re also more likely to give more detailed and precise answers to questions.
[Read more]
CNET News

LG Optimus Slider let’s you text like a fiend

Let your fingers do the talking with Virgin Mobile’s LG Optimus Slider.
[Read more]
CNET News

Banned “Tax the Rich” TED Talk slides and text here

For those of you wondering if there’s ever a TED Talk that presents an idea too controversial for the group to publish it, there definitely is, and venture capitalist Nick Hanauer was the one to make it. What we’ve got here is the full text of the TED Talks presentation Hanauer made at the March

Read The Full Story
SlashGear

Verizon To Begin Offering “Text To 911″ Service



An anonymous reader writes “In a move that will likely elicit a ‘why didn’t they implement that sooner?’ response, Verizon in the next 12 months will begin implementing a ‘text to 911′ feature that, as the name implies, will enable users contact 911 operators via text message to report an emergency. The feature will be particularly helpful for the hearing and/or speech impaired, and for folks who find themselves in dangerous situations where making a voice 911 call isn’t advisable. Beginning in early 2013, Verizon will start rolling out the feature in various metropolitan areas before progressing to a nationwide rollout soon thereafter. In many respects, this move has been a long time coming, and something the FCC has been championing for a few years.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

OS X Lion update accidentally outs user passwords in plain text, stumbles over FileVault

Are you an avid user of OS X’s FileVault encryption and running a recently updated version of Lion? It may be time to consider changing your passwords. According to security researcher David Emry, users who used FileVault prior to upgrading to 10.7.3 may be able to find their password in a system-wide debug log file, stored in plain text outside of the encrypted area. This puts the password at risk of being read by other users or enterprising cyber criminals, Emry explains, and even opens the door for new flaw-specific malware. FileVault 2, on the other hand, seems to be unaffected by the bug. The community doesn’t currently have a way to fight the flaw, so users rushing to change their password now may find it being logged as well. Obviously, we’ll let you all know once we hear back from Apple regarding this matter.

OS X Lion update accidentally outs user passwords in plain text, stumbles over FileVault originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 06 May 2012 12:55:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceZDNet  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Verizon takes the lead on text to 911 services

Verizon takes the lead on text to 911 services

The FCC first outlined its intention to allow texting to emergency services back in 2010, and since then despite more talk of accepting photo and video messages, nothing official came to be. This week, however, Verzion has taken the initiative, and announced its own plans to enable text to 911 for its customers. Working with TeleCommunication Systems, the big red hopes that it can facilitate the sending of SMS messages to emergency call-centers as soon as early 2013. Texting isn’t just about adding communication options, it also provides a valuable tool to the deaf, hard of hearing and situations where talking is dangerous, or not possible. The service will use existing CDMA and SMS networks, and therefore should be available to all customers once finally rolled out.

Continue reading Verizon takes the lead on text to 911 services

Verizon takes the lead on text to 911 services originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 05 May 2012 19:31:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink Venturebeat  |   | Email this | Comments
Engadget

PlayThru hopes to kill text captchas with game-based authentication

Image

At their worst, captchas are impossible to decipher; at their best, they’re… fun? A startup called Are You a Human has developed PlayThru, an alternative to text-based authentication. Instead of requiring the user to type some blurry, nonsensical word, PlayThru has them play a mini-game, such as dragging and dropping a car into an open parking spot. The startup says this method is more secure than word captchas — since automated bots have a harder time solving these image-based puzzles — and more fun, because users generally have a better time when their ability to identify letters isn’t called into question. PlayThru has been in beta for several months and is currently available as a free download. On May 21st, the solution will officially launch on both PCs and smartphones. Click through to the source link to try out the captcha alternative for yourself.

PlayThru hopes to kill text captchas with game-based authentication originally appeared on Engadget on Thu, 03 May 2012 23:49:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceAre You a Human  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Google+ expands SMS support to over 41 countries, lets you stay social over text

Image

On the off chance your cell phone is of the decidedly dumb variety, Mountain View’s engineers have worked out an alternative solution to keep your Google + circles intersecting. Initially available only for the U.S. and Indian markets at the time of the social service’s launch, the search giant’s expanding the reach of its SMS feature to over 41 additional countries, giving users the option to post updates, as well as receive and reply to notifications via text. The feature isn’t standard, so if you want to opt-in, you’ll have to enable it in the settings menu first, provided your carrier is supported. Luddites that like to have their online cake and eat it too, might want to make sure they’re packing an appropriately capacious mobile plan before those thumbs get to banging away. Of course, the rest of you modernists are more than welcome to join the party, but why would you?

Google+ expands SMS support to over 41 countries, lets you stay social over text originally appeared on Engadget on Fri, 20 Apr 2012 16:32:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink TheNextWeb  |  sourceGoogle India  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

AT&T’s Text Messaging Plans Are a Regressive Tax

The unexpected connection between carrier pricing schemes and payday loans.

The most active senders and receivers of texts are nonwhite, earn incomes below $ 30,000, and do not have a high school education, says a 2011 study conducted by the Pew Research Center’s Internet & American Life Project.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

TextSpresso machine brews caffeinated goodness via text messaging (video)

TextSpresso machine lets geeks remotely brew caffeinated goodness via text messages (video)

The folks at Zipwhip may have unwittingly discovered a new business model. While the company is primarily focused on cloud messaging services, it’s recently created an espresso maker that allows employees to whip up custom brews from the comfort of their mobile phone. Known as TextSpresso, it’s based on the Jura Impressa XS90, but unlike the retail model, the machine accepts orders via SMS. As if that weren’t enough, it’s part of a larger system that’s capable of printing employee names onto the foam (using edible ink) and then placing the drink onto a warming tray. TextSpresso is very much a custom job, but if you’d like an inside peek of the system — complete with servo motors, an Arduino microcontroller and a retro-fitted Canon printer — be sure to hop the break and dream of what could be.

Continue reading TextSpresso machine brews caffeinated goodness via text messaging (video)

TextSpresso machine brews caffeinated goodness via text messaging (video) originally appeared on Engadget on Sat, 07 Apr 2012 00:34:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceGeekWire  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

FTC Fines RockYou $250,000 For Storing User Data In Plain Text



An anonymous reader writes “You probably don’t remember the RockYou fiasco as it happened in late 2009. In case you don’t, social game developer RockYou suffered a serious SQL injection flaw on its flagship website. Worse, the company was storing user details in plain text. As a result, tens of millions of login details, including those belonging to minors, were stolen and published online. Now, RockYou has finally settled with the Federal Trade Commission.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

An App to Turn Sign Language to Text

Could portable computing transform the ways the deaf communicate?

Scientists are working on an app that they say could act as a sort of translator for the deaf. Specifically, the app would leverage the video camera on a portable device to capture sign language and render it as text. The technology, developed by Technabling, a spin-out of the University of Aberdeen, is being called the portable sign language translator, or PSLT.







Technology Review RSS Feeds

Microsoft Shows Off Adaptive, Multilingual Text to Speech System



MrSeb writes about a really cool project from Microsoft’s speech research group. From the article: “Microsoft Research has shown off software that translates your spoken words into another language while preserving the accent, timbre, and intonation of your actual voice. In a demo of the prototype software, Rick Rashid, Microsoft’s chief research officer, said a long sentence in English, and then had it translated into Spanish, Italian, and Mandarin. You can definitely hear an edge of digitized ‘Microsoft Sam,’ but overall it’s remarkable how the three translations still sound just like Rashid. The translation requires an hour of training, but after that there’s no reason why it couldn’t be run in real time on a smartphone, or near-real-time with a cloud backend. Imagine this tech in a two-way setup. You speak into your smartphone, and it comes out in their language. Then, the person you’re talking to speaks into your smartphone and their voice comes out in your language.”

The Techfest 2012 keynote has a demo of the technology around minute 13:00.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Blown text auto-correct locks down school

A Georgia student texts: “Gunna be at West Hall this afternoon.” Auto-correct, however changes the first word to “gunman.” Pandemonium ensues.
[Read more]
CNET News

Facebook spies on phone users’ text messages, report says

Internet giant Facebook is accessing smartphone users’ personal text messages, an investigation revealed Sunday.




FOXNews.com

Georgia Tech iPhone App Could Help Blind Users Text



MojoKid writes “Researchers at Georgia Tech university have built a prototype app for touch-screen mobile devices that is vying to be a complete solution for texting without the need to look at a mobile gadget’s screen. In theory, it should greatly help the blind interact with mobile phones, but it could help just about anyone looking for a more efficient way to interact. Research has shown that gesture-based texting is a viable solution for eyes-free written communication in the future, making obsolete the need for users to look at their devices while inputting text. The free open-source app, called BrailleTouch, incorporates the Braille writing system used by the visually impaired. Early studies with visually impaired participants proficient in Braille typing have demonstrated that users can input up to 32 words per minute with 92 percent accuracy with the prototype app for the iPhone.”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Microsoft Store hacked in India, passwords stored in plain text

Frequenters of India’s online Microsoft Store were briefly greeted with the suspicious visage of a Guy Fawkes mask this morning, following a hack that compromised the site’s user database. According to WPSauce, Microsoft Store India’s landing page was briefly taken over by a hacker group called Evil Shadow Team, who, in addition to putting a new face on Windows products, revealed that user passwords were saved in plain text. The group’s motivations are unknown, though the hacked page warned that an “unsafe system will be baptized.” The store is now offline, suggesting that Microsoft may have regained control. Read on for a look at the compromised password database.

[Thanks to everyone who sent this in]

Continue reading Microsoft Store hacked in India, passwords stored in plain text

Microsoft Store hacked in India, passwords stored in plain text originally appeared on Engadget on Sun, 12 Feb 2012 14:19:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |  sourceWPSauce, HackTeach  | Email this | Comments
Engadget

YC-Backed SendHub Lets Businesses Text Their Customers, And Teachers Text For Free

sendhub-final-trimmedY Combinator and Start Fund-backed startup SendHub, which offers a simple SMS solution for businesses, is killing it…and it never “officially” launched. Instead, the company soft-launched a couple of months ago with zero fanfare, and already has several hundred customers, 40% of which are active monthly users, sending some 30,000 SMS text messages per month.

Although generating revenue through its premium services for businesses, SendHub is also making teachers’ lives easier, by providing them with free tools to communicate with students and parents via SMS.
TechCrunch

Text Message Brands Quebec Man a Terror Suspect



An anonymous reader writes “Saad Allami likely never expected that a simple text message of encouragement would have turned his life upside down. But as seen in a similar case of absurd overreaction by authorities, a simple text message is all it takes to have yourself branded as a terrorist. From the article: ‘The Quebec man says he was arrested by provincial police while picking up his seven-year-old son at school. A team of police officers stormed into his home, telling his wife she was married to a terrorist. And his work colleagues were detained for hours at the U.S. border because of their connection to him.’”

Read more of this story at Slashdot.


Slashdot

Scosche cellControl locks your device while driving, tattles on your text habit

Trying to keep the points off your record, but just can’t resist the urge to tweet, text and talk behind the wheel? Maybe it’s time you gave up on that whole “self-restraint” schtick and leaned on technology to keep your cellular inhibitions in check. Scosche’s cellControl might do the trick, it pairs bit of bluetooth-enabled automotive hardware with a feature-blocking smartphone app to keep your handset under lockdown when you’re on the go. It even rats you out if you deactivate or uninstall the system — automatically sending a text message or email to a “designated administrator,” just in case you fall off the wagon. The system boasts compatibility with over 1200 devices across Android, Blackberry, Symbian and Windows Mobile 5 and 6. Artificial restraint will set you back $ 130, you know, in case self-control and other distracted driving apps aren’t doing the trick. Hit the break for the system’s official press release.

Continue reading Scosche cellControl locks your device while driving, tattles on your text habit

Scosche cellControl locks your device while driving, tattles on your text habit originally appeared on Engadget on Mon, 23 Jan 2012 04:11:00 EDT. Please see our terms for use of feeds.

Permalink   |   | Email this | Comments
Engadget

Text message use declining in some countries

Everywhere you go in most parts of the US, you will run across hoards of people that are texting no matter where they are. According to an analyst from M.I.G. Research, Tero Kuittinen, the number of text messages being sent is actually in decline on some parts of the world. Kuittinen cites Finnish Mobile network [...]
SlashGear