Startup Uses Radiation Fear To Map Cellphone Coverage
judgecorp writes "Fears that mobile phones cause cancer have never had strong backing from scientific research, but Israeli startup Tawkon is using those fears for an interesting business model. Its free app (banned from Apple's App Store, but on Android, BlackBerry and unlocked iPhones) tracks how much radiation your phone is emitting. This lets concerned users hold their phones away from their heads or whatever — but it also gives Tawkon a useful map of cellphone coverage around the world, which is the real asset it is monetizing — for the benefit of everyone, it says."
...is using those fears for an interesting business model
So, it's the newest high-tech version of selling magic crystals, horoscopes, and wall plug nuclear electricity filters? Wow. That's classy.
Ezekiel 23:20
The summary should say "jailbroken iPhones" instead of "unlocked iPhones". Jailbreaking allows unauthorized apps, unlocking allows SIM freedom.
It's not a Trojan Horse if you leave a note on the side saying: "This horse is full of armed Greek warriors. By bringing this horse into your city, you also agree to allow said warriors to kill and pillage any and all occupants of the afore-mentioned city". Either that, or the Trojans just didn't have good lawyers.
Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
"Apple, which refused to hose the software, "
I'd imagine it's "banned" for the same reason as wardriving apps: because they use undocumented calls to get low level info from the radios. It sounds like they appealed to Jobs himself, but he turned them down. I can't really blame him, as the app's two functions seem to be (a) scare you with BS and (b) spy on you.
App Store restrictions are a bit annoying, but less annoying than having to run an antivirus program on your phone. Power users can, at least, jailbreak.
How can I believe you when you tell me what I don't want to hear?
This site notes that there is no link, but points out the WHO lists it as a "Possible carcinogen". Lets take a look at what else the WHO lists as "Possible carcinogens":
Coffee, dry cleaning, exhaust/gas, pickled vegatables, nickle... to name a few
[source: http://monographs.iarc.fr/ENG/Classification/ClassificationsGroupOrder.pdf%5D 2B is prossible, 2A is probable
Using stupid people as robots...very smart indeed. The same thing could be done for wifi, or tracking the appearance of contrails. I'm sure there are plenty of possibilities previously unimagined due to insufficient cynicism.
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
I can certainly see the monetary value in producing cell-phone coverage reports. And I have a hard time arguing with this method of collecting it. The user gets information that they find valuable (phone radiation emitted) in return for that information (with PII stripped, one would hope) being used for what the business would like to make money off of.
As long as they aren't actually asserting any conclusions as to the user's health, it's not even particularly misleading.
More simple than that - you can't publish Apps that make Apples' hardware look bad. Period.
"Three benefits for me, one benefit for you...."
Never the idealized equal exchange of value that I was taught in Business Law 101. Nope, we get Highlander-style economics instead.
Not so much for protecting me from "radiation", but to keep battery consumption low: whenever the signal is weak, the phone compensates by increasing transmitting power, draining the battery in the process. If Tawkon warns me of strong transmitting field, I'll keep the conversation short.
"The agriculture ministry is not in charge of Gundam" - Japanese ministry official.
While the fear mongering and data collection is a bit worrisome, they might actually be on to something here.
It would be very useful to have crowd-sourced maps of cell coverage, speeds, dropped calls, etc... Would certainly make the choice of provider a much more informed decision, instead of relying on their own coverage maps.
This signature is false.
Isn't the best-case scenario these people putting the phone on speaker and setting it on the center console? That gets it out of the shoulder/head/hands entirely.
It doesn't hurt to be nice.
Isn't the best-case scenario these people putting the phone on speaker and setting it on the center console? That gets it out of the shoulder/head/hands entirely.
Ah, but there's a conflict between "wearing a tinfoil hat to keep the phone/government waves out of your brain" and "submitting to the government imposition on my freedom to phone however and whenever I want to". Tricky one.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
I love the masses of people that get up in arms about irritating children every time that they want to build a cell tower. These same parents are perfectly fine with giving their children devices with transmitters to hold an inch from their brain, but a tower 1/4 mile away will give everybody cancer and must be stopped.
To be fair, I'm sure the output of the tower is a bit more than one mobile phone, and yes I do know about the inverse square law.
To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
I figured, given the kind of language and methodology they teach the worker drones at the Apple stores per that leaked document that came out a while ago, that it was just a matter of making iPhones look bad, so they disallowed it.
Support the EFF and Creative Commons. The war is coming, and they're supporting you...
Quote: Not allowed on iPhone after personal rejection by Steve Jobs
Yeah, this app is that old.
Of course news about a fake are Fake News.