February 11, 2009 4:11 PM

New Phone Service Will Eavesdrop, Sell Ads

By
Keach Hagey
(CBS)  The Skinny is Keach Hagey's take on the top news of the day and the best of the Internet.


Some people have just devised a new way to listen into private telephone calls and use the information gathered from them for their own purposes - and for once they don't work for the NSA.

The New York Times reports on today's launch of a new Internet phone service that will be supported by advertising related to what people are talking about in their calls.

Dreamed up by Pudding Media, a start-up based in San Jose, Calif., the service is similar to Skype (let's hope not too similar) but is free. The trade-off is that the company will use voice recognition software to monitor the calls, select ads based on what it hears and push the ads to the user's computer screen while he or she is talking.

Pudding Media CEO Ariel Maislos defends the company against criticisms from privacy advocates by pointing out that Google does basically the same thing with e-mail, and nobody seems to mind. He also thinks that only old people care about privacy. (And really, after taking a tour through MySpace, who can blame him for assuming American youths are a bunch of wanton exhibitionists?)

He sees his company as simply capitalizing on the universal impulse to phone-doodle. But in early tests, he noticed that the content had a tendency to determine conversation.

"The conversation was actually changing based on what was on the screen," he said. "Our ability to influence the conversation was remarkable."

U.S. Military Is "Baiting" Insurgents In Iraq

Well, here's a story that's sure to increase the on-the-ground popularity of all those American troops who won't be coming back from Iraq all that soon after all.

The Washington Post reports that the Pentagon has encouraged some U.S. military snipers in Iraq to target suspected insurgents by scattering pieces of "bait," such as detonation cords, plastic explosives and ammunition, and then kill Iraqis who pick them up.

"Baiting is putting an object out there that we know they will use, with the intention of destroying the enemy," Capt. Matthew Didier, leader of an elite sniper scout platoon, said in a sworn statement.

The Post got hold of the classified documents describing the program from family members of three snipers accused of murder because they allegedly planted evidence on Iraqis they killed. Although the case in question does not directly involve baiting, the lawyers for the accused snipers are arguing that questionable practices like baiting have blurred the legal lines of killing in a complex war zone.

The Pentagon has refused to talk about the program, but Eugene Fidell, president of the National Institute of Military Justice, said the baiting program should be examined "quite meticulously" because it raises troubling possibilities, such as what happens when civilians pick up the items.

"In a country that is awash in armaments and magazines and implements of war, if every time somebody picked up something that was potentially useful as a weapon, you might as well as every Iraqi to walk around with a target on his back," he said.

Law School Not The Get-Rich-Quick Scheme Some Hoped

Two of today's papers bear front-page stories in which lawyers whine about not making enough money.

USA Today reports that federal judges are grumbling - apparently within earshot of Congress - that their salaries lag far behind those of private attorneys and law school deans.

Since 2005, 22 of 875 federal judges serving lifetime appointments have resigned or retired - more than any other time in history. Most earned higher salaries after leaving the bench.

This is bad because federal judges looking forward to a lucrative future job are less likely to make the kind of unpopular decisions often involved in protecting constitutional rights. Chief Justice John Roberts has said the trend has put the independence of the federal judiciary at stake.

The problem isn't really the salaries themselves - they're a healthy $165,000 a year - but the growing gap between what judges and their peers earn elsewhere. From 1995 to 2005, salaries for first-year lawyers rose 79 percent and salaries for partners in the top 100 first climbed 121 percent. To plug the gap, the Senate is considering boosting federal judges' salaries to $247,000 a year.

Not Going To Be Top Of Your Class? Maybe Give Law School A Pass

The root cause of the federal judges' problem - those astronomical private practice salary figures quotes above - are causing a much wider-spread headaches for young lawyers, the Wall Street Journal reports.

Such drool-worthy digits are masking the truth: the job market for your average law school graduate is actually waning.

There are just too many JDs being handed out these days for the demand, leaving many recent grads saddled with six figures of students debt and few prospects beyond part-time contract work that pays as little as $20 an hour and leaves them uninsured.

Many are angry that they were lured into law school with promises of big first-year salaries that were arrived at through questionable mathematics.

For example, Tulane University reported to U.S. News and World Reports' widely watched annual law-school ratings that its' law school graduates entered in the job market in 2005 had an median salary of $135,000. But that is based on a survey that only 24 percent of that years' graduates completed - no doubt the highest achieving chunk.

In general, lawyering has never been so lucrative for superstars who get into the nation's top law schools, or those who graduate at the tippy-top of their classes. But the bulk of lawyers' salary growth hasn't been keeping up with inflation in recent years, the paper reports. Meanwhile, tuition growth at law school has tripled the rate of inflation over the past 20 years.

It leaves people like Matthew Fox Curl, who graduated in 2004 from second-tier University of Houston in the bottom quarter of his class, in a tough spot. After months of job hunting he took his first job working for a personal injury lawyer and made $32,000 in his first year. He quickly found that Texas tort reform has been "brutal" to the states' plaintiffs' lawyers and last year left to open up his own criminalal defense private practice.

He's making less money than his last job and is thinking about moving back into his parents' house. "I didn't think three years out I'd be uninsured," he complained, "thinking it's a great day when a crackhead brings me $500."


A NOTE TO READERS: The Skinny is available via e-mail. Click here and follow the directions to register to receive it in your inbox each weekday morning.

Copyright 2009 CBS. All rights reserved.
Add a Comment See all 27 Comments
by owengary111 May 6, 2010 6:19 PM EDT
TELECOM MOBILE Ltd is a specialist provider
Mobile phones (GSM and CDMA), Video Games, Apple Ipad, Iphone,Camera
Laptops and Pioneer CDJ games, GUITAR, video camera.Musical Instruments With high quality products, better service
and good reputation, we have gained great support from customers, and
become stronger and more powerful. Therefore, the scale has been
expanded, and now we have our own Trading Branch Offices.
In particular, we can supply Mobile phones (GSM and CDMA),
Video Games, Apple Ipads, Iphone, HTC, Nokia / Sony Ericsson.

Iphones Models:-
Tablet Apple Ipad 32gb?$500
Apple IPad 16gb?$350
Apple Ipad 32gb?$470
Apple iPhone 3G S 32gb?$400USD
Apple iPhone 3G S 16gb?.$350USD
Apple iPhone 3G 16gb?$300USD
Apple iPhone 3G 8gb??$270USD
Apple iPhone 16gb ??$250USD
Apple iPhone 8gb ??..$230USD
Apple iTouch 32gb?..$250USD

Nokia Models:-
NOKIA N97 MINI?-$500USD
NOKIA X6?-$580USD
NOKIA X3?-$380USD
NOKIA N900?-$450USD
NOKIA 5800 NAVIGATION EDITION?-$350USD
NOKIA 5330 MOBILE TV EDITION?-$350USD
NOKIA MURAL??$200USD
NOKIA 6760 SLIDE?-$500USD
NOKIA 6790 SURGE?-$290USD
NOKIA 5530 XPRESSMUSIC?-$160USD
NOKIA 5730 XPRESSMUSIC?-$280USD
NOKIA 8800 GOLD ARTE?-$800USD
Nokia N97 32GB?-$400USD

Sony Ericsson Models:-
SONY ERICSSON PURENESS?-$570USD
SONY ERICSSON XPERIA X10?-650USD
SONY ERICSSON XPERIA X2?-$550usd
SONY ERICSSON JALOU D&G EDITION?-$400USD
SONY ERICSSON JALOU?-$300USD
Sony Ericsson Satio Idou?-$500USD
Sony Ericsson W995?-$250USD
Sony Ericsson Yari?-$220USD
Sony Ericsson Aino?-$260USD
Sony Ericsson G705?-$230USD
Sony Ericsson T303?-$135USD
Sony Ericsson XPERIA X1?-$350USD
Sony Ericsson G900?-$190USD
Sony Ericsson G700?-$185USD
Sony Ericsson G700 Business Edition?-$180USD
Sony Ericsson W980?-$170USD
Sony Ericsson P1?-$230USD

Blackberry Models:-
Blackberry Bold 9700?-$500USD
Blackberry Storm2 9520?-$500USD
Blackberry Storm 9550?-$450USD
Blackberry Storm 9530?-300USD
Blackberry Storm 9500?-$240USD
Blackberry Pearl Flip 8220?-$225USD
Blackberry Bold 9000?-$230USD
Blackberry Curve 8300?-$225USD
Blackberry 7100t?-$205USD
Blackberry 8820?-$190USD

HTC Models:-
HTC HD2?-$600USD
HTC PURE?-$370USD
HTC TATTOO?-$400USD
HTC TOUCH?-300USD
HTC OZONE?-$400USD
HTC SNAP?-$350USD
HTC MAGIC?-$300USD
HTC TILT2?-$450USD
HTC TOUCH PRO2?-$460USD
HTC TOUCH DIAMOND?-$460USD
HTC DREAM?-$250USD
HTC TOUCH CRUISE 09?-$300USD
HTC MAX 4G??$750USD
HTC TOUCH HD??$470USD
HTC TOUCH 3G??$480USD

Email::::::::::::::: telecommobile02@live.com
::::::::::::::: telecommobile01@gmail.com
Reply to this comment
by scottyusa September 25, 2007 6:31 PM EDT
If they start monitoring 900 numbers here is a tip; invest in the condom industry
Reply to this comment
by whispyseas September 25, 2007 5:32 PM EDT


'' ... dared girls, having learned what the good rapist dare boys are all about, grew up to drag their kids kicking and screaming to the dare houses for their own educational salvation ... most girls raped though were raped by their own familys, and too have no qualms about not freeing the children as were freed the women ... ''


'' ... most folk most time don''t dance get well feed world songs, they dance get sick tax world songs, and not rallied around the hundreds millions sick beds drifting but around the hundreds millions well beds racing, amoung the tens millions spore bloom weed dragon trail fickle first aid lunch farm cottage studio trail groups ... ''

Reply to this comment
by brianbwb-2009 September 25, 2007 6:56 AM EDT
I can see it now...

Me: You know, Bush is a complete moron and a Nazi
(Mercedes ad)

Other: Yeah, everybody knows, but no one has the balls to do anything about it
(Nerf ball ad)

Me: And the economy will soon collapse into bankruptcy because of this idiot.
(Master card ad)

Other: Don''t forget Cheney, he is the master, Bush is just his lap dog
(Alpo ad)

Me: and Condoleeza is the female counterpart to Uncle Tom
(Uncle Ben''s converted rice ad)

Other: And the Democrats are too weak to stand up to the chicken hawks
(KFC ad)

Me: And now they talk about permanent hostilities in Iraq, we need a way to tell them all to take their stupid rhetoric and shove it.
(tampon ad)
Reply to this comment
by magoo2u1 September 25, 2007 1:22 AM EDT
So, you spot a munition in your front yard and figure you should do something before the kids stumble on it. Kablooweee. Now you can answer that age old question about life after death. I don''t understand why anyone would complain about that policy.
Reply to this comment
by magoo2u1 September 25, 2007 1:17 AM EDT
It''''''''s okay for an advertisment firm to listen to our phone calls to cater advertisments to us but it''''''''s not okay for the NSA to listen in for matters of national security? Where is the uproar over this?
The idiot phone is voluntary. The NSA isn''t asking and they are laying the ground work for the police state to come. Why do mind if you have nothing to hide? Maybe the NSA is making their list of people to take on a helicopter ride out to the pacific. It worked in south america. They start with the college students.
Reply to this comment
by shanev137 September 24, 2007 11:18 PM EDT
Remind me never to buy one of these.
Reply to this comment
by kaelinda September 24, 2007 9:16 PM EDT
So if you don''t want your conversations overheard, don''t subscribe to this new and invasive internet service. Like most other things on the net, it may be free if you allow the eavesdropping and advertising, and cost a bundle if you don''t. So you pays yer money and you takes yer choice.
Reply to this comment
by hypnotoad72 September 24, 2007 8:53 PM EDT
I''d much rather have the NSA eavesdrop on me, thank you all the same. Like when I called my parents last week and talked about The Late Late Show (Craig Ferguson deserves to be on at a proper hour, he''s the best thing on TV) I mentioned getting a DVR...

Now as I do my own product research, I don''t need some telemarketing minstrel meandering with his mandolin to me over and over why their brand is best. Chances are it isn''t, and it would probably break 3 weeks after the warranty expired anyway...
Reply to this comment
by toolmangler-2009 September 24, 2007 6:23 PM EDT
diagreement=disagreement
Reply to this comment
See all 27 Comments
.
Scroll Left
Scroll Right More »
CBS News on Facebook