Apple iPhone Prototype Loss Prompts Security Job Listings: Report
Apple posted two positions for product security management following an incident where an iPhone prototype was lost.
The rumor that an employee of computer maker Apple had lost a prototype iPhone in a bar earlier this summer has drawn considerable attention from the media, and while the report remains unconfirmed, Apple may be taking steps to help ensure an incident does not occur again. The company recently posted two job listings for their product security team in the management position. The candidate would be responsible for overseeing the protection of, and managing risks to, Apple's unreleased products and related intellectual property. The position would reside in Apple's Cupertino, Calif. headquarters and would require up to 30 percent travel (international and domestic), according to the listing. In addition, the individual would collaborate with other security managers by contributing to, and managing execution of, strategic initiatives set forth by the company's director of global security.In 2010, an Apple employee lost an iPhone 4 prototype at the Gourmet Haus Staudt beer garden in Redwood City, Calif. The device's discoverers promptly sold it to Gawker Media, parent company of tech blog Gizmodo, which dissected it in a lengthy and much-circulated posting. California prosecutors later abandoned plans to file charges against Gizmodo, but the two men who sold the prototype weren't so lucky. The early leak had a negligible effect on sales of the iPhone 4, which remains a linchpin of Apple's smartphone line.
Rumors suggest the next iPhone, which could be launched in either September or October, will feature a larger screen and faster processor, along with an 8-megapixel camera and possibly a redesigned body. There's also a widespread theory that Apple intends to release a line of low-cost iPhones to complement its next-generation device, which in turn would allow Cupertino to combat the rising number of cheap Google Android smartphones on the market.









