iPhone app includes hidden tethering

Dev shows how to use QuasiDisk to share iPhone Internet connection with a notebook; app remains on App Store

An iPhone developer has acknowledged that a recent update to one of his apps includes the hidden ability to tether the smartphone to a laptop, circumventing carrier fees for the service.

Chris Simpson, best known for creating apps for "jailbroken" iPhones, posted a walk-through on YouTube that shows users of his QuasiDisk app how to set it up for tethering.

By tethering a smartphone to a laptop, users can share the phone's cellular connection to the Internet with a notebook. Carriers typically levy additional fees for the service: AT&T, for example, charges customers an extra $20 per month for tethering an iPhone, although as part of the deal it also boosts the allowed data usage from 3GB to 5GB.

Although QuasiDisk is billed as a "simple file manager and file viewer" that lets users load files, documents and photos from a third-party FTP server or sync data with a remote device using Apple's own iCloud, it also can be used for tethering, Simpson said in his instructional video.

The "What's New" section of QuasiDisk's App Store listing does not mention the functionality.

Simpson updated QuasiDisk to version 1.1 on Saturday, Jan. 28.

In the video, he spelled out the tethering process with QuasiDisk, which requires the user to start the app's FTP server, connect it to an "ad hoc" wireless network on a Mac or Windows notebook, and enter SOCKS and HTTP proxy settings on the laptop.

"That's tethering from the App store without paying your carrier," said Simpson near the end of the video.

Apple regularly -- and quickly -- boots tethering apps from the App Store, often with no explanation, but as of 3 pm (US) ET Monday, QuasiDisk was still available on Apple's e-mart.

In November, Apple yanked an app called iTether within hours of its appearance on the App Store.

QuasiDisk currently sells for $US1.99 on the App Store.

Apple did not immediately reply to a request for comment about QuasiDisk's tethering feature.

Gregg Keizer covers Microsoft, security issues, Apple, Web browsers and general technology breaking news for Computerworld. Follow Gregg on Twitter at @gkeizer , on Google+ or subscribe to Gregg's RSS feed . His e-mail address is gkeizer@computerworld.com .

See more articles by Gregg Keizer .

Read more about mobile apps and services in Computerworld's Mobile Apps and Services Topic Center.

More about: Apple, AT&T, AT&T, etwork, Google, Microsoft, Topic
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