BLUEJACKING
Bluejacking is the sending
of unsolicited messages over Bluetooth to Bluetooth-enabled devices such as
mobile phones, PDAs or laptop computers, sending a vCard which typically
contains a message in the name field (i.e. for bluedating or bluechat) to
another Bluetooth enabled device via the OBEX protocol. Bluetooth has a very
limited range usually around 10 meters on mobile phones, but laptops can reach
up to 100 meters with powerful transmitters.
Bluejacking allows phone
users to send business cards anonymously using Bluetooth wireless technology. Bluejacking does not involve the removal or alteration of any data from
the device. Bluejackers often look for the receiving phone to ping or the user
to react. In order to carry out a bluejacking, the sending and receiving
devices must be within 10 meters of one another. Phone owners who receive
bluejack messages should refuse to add the contacts to their address book.
Devices that are set in non-discoverable mode are not susceptible to bluejacking.
Mobile phones have been adopted as an everyday technology,
and they are ubiquitous in social situations as users carry them around as they
move through different physical locations throughout the day. As a
communicative device, the mobile phone has been gradually taken up in ways that
move beyond merely providing a channel for mediated conversation.
One such appropriation is bluejacking, the practice of
sending short, unsolicited messages via Vcard functionality to other
Bluetooth-enabled phones. To choose the recipients of bluejacks, senders
complete a scan using their mobile phones to search for the available
Bluetooth-enabled devices in the immediate area. A bluejacker picks one of the
available devices, composes a message within a body of the phone‟s contact
interface, sends the message to the recipient, and remains in the vicinity to
observe any reactions expressed by the recipient.
The messages tend to be anonymous since the recipient has no
idea who has sent the bluejack, and the recipient has no information about the
bluejacker, except for the name and model of the bluejacker‟s mobile phone.
Because of Bluetooth‟s short-range networking capabilities, bluejacking can
only occur between actors who are within 10 meters of each other, which makes
this activity highly location-dependent.
Contrary to what the
name suggests, the bluejack recipient‟s phone is not hijacked; that is, the
phone is at no time under the control of the bluejacker. Bluejackers, however,
ignore the conflict between the control exerted by the bluejacker and the lack
of defensive measures that can be taken by the recipient when his or her
possessional territory is violated. To gain a further understanding of why
bluejackers would engage in a practice that disrupts the social conventions of
public space, we ask the following research questions:
·
What are the characteristics of the public spaces in which
bluejacking occurs?
·
What are the alternative social conventions that might
arise from the practice of bluejacking?
·
What implications does this appropriation have for the
design of mobile social systems?
This bluejack phenomenon started after a Malaysian IT
consultant named “Ajack” posted a comment on a mobile phone forum. Ajack told
IT Web that he used his Ericsson cellphone in a bank to send a message to
someone with a Nokia 7650. Becoming bored while standing in a bank queue, Ajack
did a Bluetooth discovery to see if there was another Bluetooth device around.
Discovering a Nokia 7650 in the vicinity, he created a new contact and filled
in the first name with „Buy Ericsson!' and sent a business card to the Nokia
phone. How To Bluejack Assuming that you now have a Bluetooth phone in your
hands, the first thing to do is to make sure that Bluetooth is enabled. You
will need to read the handbook of the particular phone (or PDA etc) that you
have but somewhere in the Menu item you will find the item that enables and
disabled Bluetooth. Now, remember that Bluetooth only works over short
distances, so if you are in the middle of Dartmoor then BlueJacking isn't going
to work for you (unless the sheep have mobile phones these days!) so you need to
find a crowd. BlueJacking is very new so not everyone will have a Bluetooth
phone or PDA so the bigger the crowd the more likely you will have of finding a
'victim'. The Tube (yes, Bluetooth works underground), on the train, in a Cafe
or standing in line are all good places to start.
You will now need to create a new Contact in your Phone Book
- however rather than putting someone's name in the Name field you write your
short message instead - so for example rather than creating a contact called
Alan Philips you would write - "Hey, you have been BlueJacked!"
instead (or whatever message you want to send) Now select the new contact and
from the Menu of the phone choose "Send via Bluetooth".
This is a facility available within the Mobile Phone that was
designed to send a Contact to someone else - useful in Business when trading
names and addresses, however we are now going to use it to send our message
that was contained in the Name field of the contact - clever eh? Your phone or
PDA will start to search the airwaves for other devices that within range. If
you are lucky you will see a list of them appear, or it will say that it cannot
find any. If the latter happens then relocate to another crowd or wait a while
and try again. If you have a list of found devices then let the fun begin.
Unfortunately, almost every Bluetooth enabled device will not yet be configured
with a useful name - so you are going to have to guess. Some devices will be
called by their Phone manufacturer (e.g. Nokia, Sony) or maybe a random string.
Try one at random and look around to see who grabs their phone and then looks
perplexed when they read your message :) If you want to name your Phone so it
appears as a name in the list on a BlueJackers phone see how to name our phone
.You can build a library of contacts with predefined messages.
The various steps involve in this are as
follows:
1. First press
the 5-way joystick down.
2. Then choose
options.
3. Then choose
"New contact"
4. Then in the first
line choose your desired message.
5. Then press done.
6. Then go to the
contact.
7. Then press options.
8. Then scroll down to
send.
9. Then choose
"Via Bluetooth"
10. Then the phone will be searching for enabled Devices.
11. Then press "Select"
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