Increasingly blurred line over who owns devices

13 February 2017

When Samsung Electronics remotely disabled the last of its flawed Galaxy Note 7 smartphones last month, it further blurred the lines between who ultimately controls your phone, or computer, car or appliance: you, or the companies that make it work?

Industry executives and analysts say companies are exerting greater remote control over their devices − changing how and whether they work, removing or adding software and content, or collecting personal data from them − not always with permission or with the user's best interests at heart.

"[The Samsung case] is exactly an example of how devices ... are no longer objects we own, but rather services we've subscribed to and which can be revoked at a moment's notice," said Stefano Zanero, an Italian computer security expert.

Mahbubul Alam, chief technology officer at Movimento, a car tech firm now owned by Delphi Automotive, says manufacturers have moved on from just selling a device and hoping there's no recall, to a world where they are in touch with users through Internet-connected devices that they can "change, modify, adjust" as they see fit.

"With power comes responsibility," he adds. "It's a new power that the device manufacturers and telcos have. How they exercise their responsibility is very important."

Samsung said it retrieved 96% of the more than three million Note 7s it had sold and activated. That left more than 120 000 unreturned phones that were put out of action by over-the-air software updates or by telecom operators barring them from their networks.

In another example, HP last year used a software update to prevent unauthorised cartridges being used with some of its printers. After some users complained, HP offered an optional update. HP did not respond to requests for comment.

In other cases, manufacturers use so-called firmware updates to stop people using their devices in ways they don't want.

Apple, for example, routinely upgrades the firmware on iPhones to outwit users' attempts to open up the software to unapproved apps and functions − dubbed jailbreaking − said Bunnie Huang, a hardware entrepreneur.

Source - IT Web citing Reuters (article truncated)