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Sprint Orders All OEMs To Strip Carrier IQ From Their Phones

An anonymous reader writes with a report that Sprint, in an attempt to extricate itself from the Carrier IQ drama, has "ordered that all of their hardware partners remove the Carrier IQ software from Sprint devices as soon as possible." Sprint confirmed that they've disabled the use of Carrier IQ on their end, saying, "diagnostic information and data is no longer being collected." The software is currently installed on roughly 26 million Sprint phones, though the company has only been collecting data from 1.3 million of them.

4 of 156 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds cool by Toe,+The · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I am currently on the fence trying to decide between Sprint and Verizon. I think Sprint just tipped me to their side with this.

    1. Re:Sounds cool by Tanktalus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, that depends. On why Verizon never had CarrierIQ.

      If it's because "we looked at it, and thought it a gross violation of our customers' privacy" then, yes, "never did it" trumps.

      However, if it's because Verizon has not yet managed to get the required hardware to support the volume of data that CarrierIQ produces, combined with the analytics systems required to make bottom-line-driven decisions with that information, then, no, "never did it (yet)" does not trump. In fact, it loses, big time. Sprint, having gone down that road, sunk a bunch of money on it, and abandoned it, is the clear winner as they're unlikely to do it a second time. Verizon may still be looking at implementing it/rolling it out.

      I'm not saying that's the case. I'm saying it's a possible scenario that fits with the known facts (very few in this thread) where "never did it" does not trump "stopped doing it". I don't have any idea how likely either scenario is.

    2. Re:Sounds cool by scubamage · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A separate out-of-band piece of hardware running snmp is common place in carrier's, and in high end systems. How else do you think cable carriers control set top boxes? Its defined by packetcable and docsis specs. How else do you think iLOM, aLOM, iLO, and DRAC can provide SNMP statistics for the boxes they're embedded in? Read more before you call someone an idiot. SNMP is frequently used out of band, specifically when you don't want an end user to be screwing with things. Try working in a fortune 500 carrier and you'll learn a bit more about it.

  2. Hands in the Cookie jar? by bobbied · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think they just got caught with their hand in the cookie jar and wisely decided to let go of the cookie. I'm guessing that their corporate lawyer types who are dealing with the lawsuits recommended this happen ASAP and management is following their lawyers'' advice. The question now is will all the crumbs laying around lead to them being punished or just sent to bed without dinner.

    --
    "File to fit, pound to insert, paint to match" - Aircraft Maintenance 101