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Facebook-Direct Phones — and Facebook Right On the SIM

An anonymous reader writes "Gemalto, a Dutch digital security company, has announced Facebook for SIM at the Mobile World Congress in Barcelona. The company's software development team has effectively shrunk Facebook down so that it fits onto a standard SIM card, enabling anyone with a GSM phone to enjoy the service even if without a data plan. In fact, the company is claiming the Facebook application is compatible with 100 percent of SIM-compliant mobile phones. As a result, it works on prepaid as well as on subscription-based mobile plans. In doing so, Gemalto is offering Facebook to millions of mobile phone users regardless of their handset type. Facebook for SIM doesn't require a data connection because it taps into a handset's SMS connectivity to allow the user to interact with the service; users can sign up for Facebook, log in directly, and even check out friend requests, status updates, wall posts, and messages, all via the dedicated SIM application." And if that's just a bit too Facebook-centric for you, a notch down are two phones from HTC just announced in Barcelona, the Salsa and the ChaCha, with dedicated Facebook buttons.

3 of 113 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Ow, ow ow. by dakameleon · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It probably should read:

    "shrunk [a program to access to the] Facebook [API via SMS] down so that it fits on a SIM" ... but I guess it's pitched towards non-technical users?

    --
    Man who leaps off cliff jumps to conclusion.
  2. HTTPS is now available: Let's use SMS instead! by gnapster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    ... access to the world’s most popular social network, wherever you are and without an Internet connection, could prove very appealing. I think protesters in Egypt would agree.

    If I had been a protester in Egypt or Tunisia recently, I would not want my facebook messages going over the wire by SMS.

  3. Re:More data for Zoidberg, er Zuckerberg by LordLucless · · Score: 5, Insightful

    every number I dial, every contact I have, every app I have installed, every text message or email I send or receive, everywhere I go via the GPS receiver, every web page I visit, every photo I take

    Might want to read the article, buddy. It's an implementation of Facebook's SMS API at a SIM level. It doesn't report anything, unless you, the user, uses it to explicitly send a message to Facebook.

    "But that's paranoid! Facebook would never do that!"

    Last I looked "Gemalto, a Dutch digital security company", wasn't Facebook.

    All this without permission, or in stark contrast to denial of permission, automatically and silently.

    Now you're just pulling things out of your arse.

    --
    Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face