But all that connectivity means vulnerability in the eyes of the people charged with keeping the president safe. Things like tracking the president by GPS or monitoring his heart rate have got to be nightmares for Obamas IT team, to say nothing of the danger that his e-mails might be hacked, or a microphone surreptitiously used to spy on classified briefings.
The New York Times describes the technological travails of the commander-in-chief. They cant say precisely how his gadgets have been modifiedthats a matter of national securitybut they profile a former member of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, who had to have his iPad modified by DARPA techs before it was usable in classified briefing rooms. Its reasonable to think that most of Obamas devices have suffered a similar fate, stripped of Bluetooth transmitters, tiny cameras, location sensors, and the like.
As for why Obama rocks a BlackBerry when makers of more stylish devices would clearly be willing to hook him up, in 2013 he said: I am not allowed, for security reasons, to have an iPhone. Poor guy.
(Source: New York Times)