Friday, February 20, 2009



Wednesday, February 18, 2009

mobile 8 Antivirus n series







Virus en un celular? A lo mejor y te suena raro pero es una realidad, para aquellos que tienen un celular con el Sistema Operativo Symbian es todo un problema tener virus, Celulares lentos, no responden, etc.

Los celulares llevan consigo distintos sistemas operativos, siendo uno de los más conocidos el sistema Symbian muy presente en los equipos de la marca Nokia, algunos Sony Ericsson, etc. Y es que sistema permite la ejecución de aplicaciones fabricadas por terceros dentro de los cuales encontramos a los virus también, y como donde virus viven, antivirus sobreviven.




¿Virus en un celular? A lo mejor y te suena raro pero es una realidad, para aquellos que tienen un celular con el Sistema Operativo Symbian es todo un problema tener virus, Celulares lentos, no responden, etc.

Los celulares llevan consigo distintos sistemas operativos, siendo uno de los más conocidos el sistema Symbian muy presente en los equipos de la marca Nokia, algunos Sony Ericsson, etc. Y es que sistema permite la ejecución de aplicaciones fabricadas por terceros dentro de los cuales encontramos a los virus también, y como donde virus viven, antivirus sobreviven.

Copia de mcafee-virusscan-mobile-1107 Kaspersky Anti-Virus Mobile (1)

Acá comparto 8 antivirus que ayudarán a hacerte la vida más fácil y poder combatir a esos

bichejos que siempre molestan.


Animations - click 001
DOWNLOAD Click Me!...


La lista de antivirus es la siguiente:

Simworks Antivirus 1.2.4
NetQin v2.0
Anti CommWarrior v1.0
Kaspersky Antivirus Mobile v2.0.45 Beta2
McAfee Virus Scan v1.11
Symantec Mobile Threats Removal Tool v 1.05
Symantec Mobile Security 4.0
Trend Micro Mobile Security

Extra Extra: Threat Level Wants Your Apple Conspiracy Theory -- Update 1

Apple's COO Timothy Cook told analysts Monday that, of the 1.4 million iPhones sold this year, about 250,000 weren't activated with the exclusive U.S. provider, AT&T.

Because of that, we estimate Apple won't realize tens of millions in annual revenue from part of its revenue-sharing plan with AT&T. Cook told analysts that 250,000 iPhones were "bought with the intention of unlocking" -- meaning being hacked into and possibly sold for a profit overseas where they will operate on a network other than AT&T's.

A dispute is raging here at THREAT Level, at Wired News and with our brethren blog Epicenter over why Apple would allow this to happen.

Why doesn't Apple demand that consumers activate the iPhone at the time of purchase? That's generally an across-the-board business model for most mobile phone providers.

What's your conspiracy theory?

For the "unboxing" aficionados, the technology exists to activate devices without them ever leaving the package. That means the unboxing climax would be turning on the phone, watching it activate and placing that first call. (It's getting warm in here.)

Here comes the THREAT LEVEL conspiracy theory: Apple perhaps wants the non-activated phones to be hacked and possibly sold overseas. Apple profits from the phones, and the more phones perhaps means more iTunes music download sales in distant markets.

And if the devices become bricks with a Steve Jobs software update, so what? Apple made the sale.

Perhaps Apple has a flawed point-of-sale business model, where nobody had the foresight to think that an non-activated iPhone would become a hot commodity. All the while, Apple's cash on hand, now at $15-plus billion dollars, didn't get there by accident.

UPDATE 1

Carl Howe, an analyst with Blackfriars Communications, said the phones are fetching upwards of $2,000 each overseas. He said Apple allows customers to walk out of the store without activating the iPhone for a simple reason: "I think Apple wanted to break some new ground, and capture customers."

Still, those buying up the maximum five iPhones at a time for the purpose of unlocking them and selling them overseas could face some legal trouble.

In November it became legal to unlock your own cell phone. Doing it for the purposes of profiteering is another matter. Miami-based TracFone is successfully suing entrepreneurs who make retail purchases of new TracFone handsets to ship overseas for use on non-TracFone services.

The cell phone unlocking exemption under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, adopted in November, covers cases where cell phone software locks are circumvented "for the sole purpose of lawfully connecting to a wireless telephone communication network." In its lawsuits, TracFone has hit resellers with a raft of claims, including trademark and copyright infringement, unfair competition, tortuous interference with business relationships, false advertising, harm to business reputation, civil conspiracy and unjust enrichment, in addition to alleged DMCA violations.

Apple did not return messages seeking comment.

THREAT LEVEL'S Apple unlocking conspiracy theory is debunked if Apple initiates TracFone-style litigation.

SpoofApp Version 2.0 Released



SpoofApp, the application that brings SpoofCard to the Apple iPhone, has released version 2.0 of it’s software today! SpoofApp version 2.0 features huge improvements over the previous 1.0 version! New features include, integrated call history and call recording playback, improved contacts integration, an improved dialer interface, faster calling, multiple PIN support and best of all, a free sample PIN with free minutes for every new user!

To use SpoofApp version 2.0, you must have a jailbroken iPhone or iPod Touch with Installer.app installed. We recommend, the ZiPhone application for Mac OS X or Windows to jailbreak your iPhone and install Installer.app in just a few simple steps!

For more information on SpoofApp, please visit http://www.SpoofApp.com.




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Unmask Blocked Calls

With TrapCall, you'll always know who's calling.

How's it work? Seriously, it's so simple, yet oh so handy. Ever get one of those annoying blocked or restricted calls?

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When Trapcall receives the blocked call, our ultra-high tech servers snap their digital fingers and the convenience begins...

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A quick Snap! and the unblocked number is instantly sent to your cell phone. No software needed.

Unblocks blocked and restricted calls.

Always know who's calling. The way it should be, right?

Trapcall works with any cell phone.

Most providers, any phone. We got ya' covered.

No need to change your current number.

Yep, keep it. We like to keep things simple around here.

Different plans for different folks.