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Keeping secrets

One of the most entertaining things about the recent launch of Apple's iPhone has been watching what the hackers have been making of it. My personal favourite so far has involved a jeweller's loupe, used to turn the iPhone's camera into a rudimentary microscope.

There's no doubt the iPhone is selling like hot cakes, but the least attractive thing about it, as with the purchase of the most shiny and expensive new mobiles, is the contract. The handset might be free (or in the case of more fancy phones, hundreds of pounds) but the call plan you have to buy with the phone will recoup the price of the handset and more.

Quite naturally, people want to be able to use the other bits of the iPhone without paying the phone company - in the case of the US, Cingular. Apple and Cingular/AT&T have locked the iPhone to the network - you can't go t a different provider and sign up to their network. This is something the US Copyright Office and regulators over on this side of the pond think is a bad thing. Even better, it's not illegal to unlock phones.

As a result, there have already been two cracks of the iPhone this week. One by Jon Lech Johansen, the man who broke the DVD codes, and another, what appears to be more significant break - if you're curious, use IRC to get to it by going to:'#iphone on irc.osx86.hu - the site's operators are worried about being slashdotted off the internet.

The thing with all of this is (and thanks to those of you that have stuck around long enough for me to get to the point) that the information is now out there, indexed and preserved by search engines. It can't be put back in the box.

There's two things to bear in mind here; firstly, security through obscurity no longer exists; customers will find out how to make something they've bought truly their own if it doesn't meet their initial expectations. The second point is less obvious; companies don't like this information being shared, and some are willing to be quite aggressive over its sharing; take a look at the reaction to a break in the encryption used in HD-DVD - and the fallout for both the companies behind HD-DVD and the publishers of the key. Try a search for the key yourself and see how impossible it's been for the supporters of HD-DVD to suppress what is, in effect, a hydra. There's no way to keep a secret for long online, and search has helped make it even harder.

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Bloggers-in-chief

Daniel Griffin, IWR Deputy Editor Daniel Griffin, IWR Deputy Editor
Daniel joined IWR in 2006 after a career as a publisher of guides, supplements and websites for magazine and event companies. His special interest is the evolving publishing and information industry online.

Peter Williams, IWR Editor Peter Williams, IWR Editor
Peter is in his second spell on IWR. Over the last few years he has developed interest in the fields of knowledge management and e-learning, writing and editing extensively on both topics.

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