Now this is a real security problem and it does not involve Apple

playstationby PseudoGil

Sony admits utter PSN failure: Your personal data has been stolen
[Via MacDailyNews]

I“Sony has finally come clean about the “external intrusion” that has caused the company to take down the PlayStation Network service, and the news is almost as bad as it can possibly get,” Ben Kuchera reports for Ars Technica. “The hackers have all your personal information, although Sony is still unsure about whether your credit card data is safe. Everything else on file when it comes to your account is in the hands of the hackers.”

[More]

So, hackers now have all your personal data and may have your credit card numbers. Sony is not sure. This looks like a real screwup. I wonder when Sony will be called in front of Congress.

Nobody was put out by Apple’s bug. Sony’s recommendation is to change your passwords else where if they are the same as the Playstation Network and to get new credit cards.

Isn’t that special! This is going to be one huge lawsuit.

The market is not rational when it comes to Apple

scorecardby terren in Virginia

The Apple Growth Scorecard
[Via asymco]

Apple’s revenue for the first quarter was $24.7 billion, which at 83% was the largest quarterly revenue growth they ever experienced. Operating margin was an all-time high of almost $7.9 billion, representing 31.9% of revenue and yielding 95% EPS growth.

After earnings were announced the share price reached $350.7. This includes $70 in cash. Trailing twelve months’ earnings were $20.97. That makes the Price/Earnings ratio 16.7. Excluding cash, P/E is 13.4. The average growth over the past four quarters was 77%.

The following chart shows the share price vs. earnings. The green line is price and the blue line is share price. I also added multiples of the earnings to show how the stock traded in certain multiple bands.

[More]

If this was a baseball game, the official scorer would have been fired a long time ago.

Normally, the price to earnings ratio (P/E) should serve as a reasonable substitute for the growth of a company, as expected by the rationalists on Wall Street. A P/E of 25 means they expect larger growth than a P/E of 12 – roughly twice as much.

So, the greater the earnings the greater the price should be. Except with Apple. As shown in the asymco post, there is no correlation between P/E and earnings growth at all. In fact, as he shows in a great graph, since the recession started, the P/E pretty much is independent of earnings growth.

Earnings grow 10% – P/E of 20. Earnings grow 100% – P/E of 20. Wall Street just does not value Apple’s fundamentals in any sort of rational way.

When it comes to Apple , they appear to simply be irrational. Since 2009, Apple’s sales have been accelerating, with sales growth actually increasing. And its earnings have also accelerated from 11% over the previous year in 2009 to 92% just this last quarter! So the increase in earnings is increasing each quarter.

That is what is normally seen as a growth company and is usually regarded with a higher P/E.

Yet there has been no change in the P/E numbers. Wall Street just cannot understand what a 21st Century Company really looks like.

It is like the team keeps hitting grand slams but the official scorekeeper only gives them singles. So anyone reading the scorecard thinks that things are just barely passable, instead of off the charts.

And in Wall Street’s world, the official scorekeeper not only keeps their job but gets a bonus. Ain’t America great!


Getting freaked out at Apple for a bug

Apple issues statement on iOS location controversy, says fix is coming
[Via AppleInsider]

Apple on Wednesday responded to growing concern over a bug in the iOS mobile operating system that powers the iPhone and iPad, informing customers that it is not tracking them and revealing that it will address the issue with a forthcoming software update.

[More]

As I mentioned before, this is not a problem. There is a valid reason for the data. They just forgot to make sure that it was being erased  properly. As the message from Apple stated:

6. People have identified up to a year’s worth of location data being stored on the iPhone. Why does my iPhone need so much data in order to assist it in finding my location today?

This data is not the iPhone’s location data—it is a subset (cache) of the crowd-sourced Wi-Fi hotspot and cell tower database which is downloaded from Apple into the iPhone to assist the iPhone in rapidly and accurately calculating location. The reason the iPhone stores so much data is a bug we uncovered and plan to fix shortly (see Software Update section below). We don’t think the iPhone needs to store more than seven days of this data.

INstead of running off with wild stories, mostly designed to increase page hits, maybe it would be better to actually talk with the company first. We seem to be in such a rush to find conspiracies for anything that I even expect people to disregard this message from Apple.

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox.

Join 183 other followers