The movie scenes with self-destructible phones are already on their way to becoming a reality. In a
somewhat bizarre turn of events, the US military's research
department, DARPA, signed a $3.4 million contract with IBM on Jan 31.
It is aimed towards development of "materials, components, and
manufacturing capabilities" for "vanishing programmable
resources" such as sensors, radios, and phones used by troops.
In plain English, “VPR” stands for
equipment that can be discarded by any means, including programmed
or remotely-triggered self-destruction. As part of the deal, IBM is
working on a glass-substrate material, which,
coupled with remote triggers placed inside one (or multiple) areas of
the
device, will make it disintegrate with
a mini-boom. Like Snapchat for phones.
According to Dan Olds, an analyst with
Gabriel Consulting, the option of self-destructing is important for
the safety of sensitive data held on digital devices. Phones and
computers left on the battlefield can end up in enemy hands and be
probed for many kinds of risky information, causing all kinds of
expected and unexpected harm.
With mobile devices becoming
increasingly "paranoid", going as far as to utilize
fingerprint and, possibly, iris scanners, who knows if next year's
flagships won't ship with a self-destruct command? Better yet, a
self-destruct API which app developers (and malware) can take advantage
of. Okay, we ought to calm our imaginations down, because IBM's
smartphone-obliteration technology probably won't make it to the
consumer market. But we wonder whether any of you hold so much sensitive
data on your phones, that you'd be willing to destroy them remotely
if they ended up forgotten or stolen?
via Computer
World
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