Information and Privacy

The Smartphone Club

My first phone was a Verizon PN-210. I used it to call Mom for rides, call Dad for chips and call friends for project deadlines as well as party times. My phone contact list was at best minimal: 10-20 contacts, including Mom and Dad! I was mostly focused on getting a driver’s license soon! I had a Myspace account and opted for Facebook. This was my world the year that the first-gen iPhone launched in 2007.

The club for smartphones was initially small. People criticized the iPhone for its slow speeds and conceived it as a PDA-phone mixture. Moreover, people in my high school were still hooked onto their iPod 60 GB models and the primary mode of non-verbal phone contact was texting. By the time I was senior in high school, however, business people and students alike began sporting iPhones on-the-go. I wondered why I would get the monstrous phone and held close to my PN-210. Nevertheless, an idea popped in my mind: what if? (I wouldn’t be surprised if that’s the same questions you smartphone owners had!)

I came into college and the club only became larger. College students – even professors and the TAs – sported smartphones! Clearly, there was something interesting about this type of phone. I decided to research these phones. For three years, I have looked at countless reviews, articles and comments and my observation of smartphones is this:

  • Con: A sense of inertia – bound to a smartphone forever!
  • Con: Data vulnerability.
  • Con: Poor battery life.
  • Pro: Great for email, texting, calling, checking reviews, and navigating.
  • Pro: Convenient for importing contact data.
  • Pro: Can be used to test web applications.

Although the cons seem to pull me back to using a “dumb”-phone, the pros illustrate how my needs are changing due to the competitive wind stirred by technology, today’s consumption of media and my major’s suggestions. I must email people; text people on-demand; call people with good quality; check reviews before I go to places; find directions online before I head out; and develop on it! I can hear the club singing “buy one already!” I must say, it’s a loud and clear voice!

Standard
Information and Privacy

Nation under Data

I can bet a dollar that you have a Facebook account. Furthermore, I’ll bet another dollar that you just opened a separate tab for it. However, there is one uncertainty related to this Facebook phenomena of yours and mine – the reliability of data transfer between Facebook and Google applications. Actually, it is a lingering thought I had in my mind over these past few weeks – can I actually export Facebook data from my Facebook account to other email services permitted? The answer is no and this Newsweek article offers some insight on this issue.

It’s shocking how Facebook and Google, the hubs of social interaction, are facing a standoff because of this data-exporting mishap. What really stands out is that the competition for the computer market has drastically changed over the years. First, it was Microsoft vs. Apple for the desktop market. Then, it was Intel vs. AMD for the chip market. And, as shown here, Facebook and Google for the data market. While the data market itself is beneficial for us and profitable for companies, it really begs us to ask the following question: what kind of information should we offer and withhold? I find this question interesting because our responses to data giants today determine how our computing experiences will be tomorrow.

One quote I found interesting was the last phrase from the Newsweek article:

…[information sharing] was great until people realized that their user data could be turned into gold. Now there are billions at stake, and nobody is playing nice anymore. -Daniel Lyons

May this quote be a note of caution to everyone with an online account. I bet no dollars on this.

Standard