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May 19, 2011

Twitter Increases 3rd-Pary App Transparency

Poster: Rich
Posted on May 19, 2011 at 12:05:49 PM
Twitter now makes it clear what information of yours that 3rd party apps are looking to access. Now there's more information for users to make a clearer decision as to which apps they want to use. Personally, I'm thrilled about it since it's never been clear before. Everyone should know exactly which information of theirs that they're giving up.

Quote

Such third-party apps need your permission to access certain information about your account. But in an effort to be more sensitive to privacy concerns, Twitter is shining more light on exactly what these apps want from you.

Now when you first try to sign into a third-party app using your Twitter credentials, Twitter will display a detailed permissions screen that lists exactly what information the app is requesting.


http://news.cnet.com/8301-1023_3-20064308-93.html#ixzz1MophjiwK
Tags Mobile Software Privacy Announcement Applications Twitter
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December 3, 2008

EFF Still Fighting Over Wiretapping

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on December 3, 2008 at 3:21:39 PM
Remember that issue? The EFF is still fighting against the retro-active immunity. Why does a so-called conservative person piss all over the Constitution?

Quote

Nonetheless, last summer Congress passed the FISA Amendments Act (FAA), a law that gives the U.S. attorney general the power to immunize telecom companies from lawsuits that accuse them of conducting unlawful spying at the bequest of the U.S. government.

Deputy Assistant Attorney General Carl Nichols told Walker that the proper decision was to toss out the lawsuits and not second guess the Bush administration.

Nonsense, said Cindy Cohn, an attorney with the Electronic Frontier Foundation, a group that advocates for the rights of Internet users. EFF has brought a class-action lawsuit against AT&T on behalf of customers and accuses AT&T of turning over communication records to the National Security Agency. On Tuesday, Cohn and the EFF asked Walker to throw out the federal statute and to tell Congress to start over.
Tags Government Legal Privacy
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0 Comments
July 18, 2008

USA ISPs Go Insane And Sign Censorship Agreement

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on July 18, 2008 at 7:11:08 PM
Welcome to America, land where the big corporation control what you see. That is the gist of what is happening now that a load of major ISPs have signed a Message of Understanding with the National Center for Missing and Exploited Children (a private company). The MOU gives NCMEC the supreme authority to judge whatever website it wants to be taken down AND have the person's name and address forwarded to them for prosecution. We live in very troubling times when this sort of thing happens.

And don't bring the argument that we need to "think of the children." When a private corporation can censor what a country sees, what's to stop them for censoring a political party or other things that many people want to see (porn)?

This kind of corporate behavior is completely un-American and the NCMEC and the ISPs that signed this 'agreement' should be charged with sedition. Ohh, did you know that the NCMEC doesn't want their name to be included when a site is taken down?

Did you also know that there is no oversight. If the NCMEC says to take down a site, that's it.

Quote

"Building on our strong commitment to online safety, the cable industry wants to help combat child pornography and exploitation," said Kyle McSlarrow, President & CEO, NCTA. “By signing the NCMEC MOU, cable Internet service providers are reaffirming their strong commitment to online safety and Internet literacy for all American families." "We are deeply grateful for this industry-wide attack on child pornography," said Ernie Allen, President & CEO, NCMEC. "It is not possible to arrest and prosecute every offender. We must be creative and build new public-private partnerships to address this insidious problem more effectively. Today's announcement represents a bold step forward."


This is a bold step forward for the corporate control of America. It started in 1919 with the Tax act. How long can we as Americans allow this trampling of our rights to continue?
Tags Rights Censorship Privacy
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April 22, 2008

NJ State Supreme Court Rules For Internet Privacy

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on April 22, 2008 at 2:17:02 PM
The title was a bit finicky, but the NJ Supreme Court (that means only the state of NJ) has ruled that an ISP cannot give information without a warrant from a grand jury. Basically that means that in NJ, you are safe from the state institutions against privacy violations. Sadly, this does nothing about the federal level.

Quote

"The New Jersey Supreme Court is the first in the nation to recognize a reasonable expectation of privacy when using the internet anonymously," said Trenton-based attorney Grayson Barber, who represented six privacy rights organizations as a friend of the court. "'I think this reflects the reality that most people do expect a measure of privacy when they are using the internet anonymously."

The unanimous seven-member court held that police do have the right to seek a user's private information when investigating a crime involving a computer, but must follow legal procedures. The court said authorities do not have to warn a suspect that they have a grand jury subpoena to obtain the information.


That's a reminder. If you are committing a crime, the authorities just need to get a warrant for the information.
Tags Government Legal Privacy
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4 Comments
December 21, 2007

Privacy: Not When Repairing Computers

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on December 21, 2007 at 5:04:49 AM
This one falls under the "duh" category. When you bring in your computer for repair, don't expect your privacy to be upheld. This is in the literal and legal sense.

Quote

When searching the Windows XP computer for some sample video files, a technician named Stephen Richert allegedly spotted files that "appeared to be pornographic in nature" based on their names. Richert clicked on one that had listed a male name and an age of 13 or 14 and found a video he believed to contain child pornography. Then the usual series of events happened: Richert called Wyomissing police, who promptly showed up, seized the computer, and, after Sodomsky returned to pick it up, seized its owner as well.
Tags Legal Privacy
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0 Comments
December 12, 2007

Ask.com Gives Us Privacy

Poster: Rich
Posted on December 12, 2007 at 2:43:01 PM
I've migrated to using Ask a few months ago. Not really because I liked them more than anyone else, but they seemed to be an alternative to the Google monster. I'm glad they're implementing this. It gives internet users the choice to browse the internet without being tracked.

Quote

"For those of us worrying about online privacy, Oakland-based Ask.com gives people the power to prevent their search from being deposited in data banks. The new privacy control, named “Ask Eraser” is scheduled to be unveiled on Tuesday. The new feature enables users to delete records of all future search queries from Ask.Com’s servers. "For people who are worried about search privacy, we let them take the issue off the table completely rather than dickering with questions about how long we'll store their search information or what we do with it," said Jim Lanzone, Ask.com's chief executive. The new feature comes as many people complain about search engines compiling records about their queries because the records could be subpoenaed or mined by advertisers."


http://www.efluxmedia.com/news_Askcom_Unveils_AskEraser_to_Protect_Users_Privacy_11642.html
Tags Privacy
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0 Comments
November 5, 2007

Warning: Email Privacy Eroding

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on November 5, 2007 at 2:48:03 PM
The US government is trying to say that Email can be looked at without warrants due to the use of AUP or TOS agreements from businesses and ISPs. The court better uphold our right to privacy in this case. The TOS may say they the ISP can look at your email, but it doesn't give the government the right to.

Quote

In a seminal case (Katz v. United States in 1963) the US Supreme Court, over the strenuous objections of the US government, upheld the right of the user of a payphone to claim a right to privacy in the contents of those communications. The Court held that the Fourth Amendment right to be secure in your "persons, house, places and effects" against unreasonable searches and seizures protected people, not just places. Thus, to determine whether you had a right against unreasonable seizure -- a kind of privacy right -- the court adopted a two-pronged test: did you think what you were doing was private and is society willing to accept your belief as objectively reasonable? The method you use to communicate can effect both your subjective expectation of privacy and society's willingness to consider that expectation as "reasonable." Shouting a "private" conversation into a megaphone at Times Square would neither be subjectively nor objectively reasonable, if you wanted the conversation to be confidential. "Broadcasting" the conversation over the radio is likewise unreasonable.
Tags Email Government Privacy
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0 Comments
March 22, 2007

Judge Blocks COPPA

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on March 22, 2007 at 6:36:25 PM
Finally, reason comes into play in the justice department. A federal judge has blocked the COPPA anti-rights act.

Quote

"Perhaps we do the minors of this country harm if First Amendment protections, which they will with age inherit fully, are chipped away in the name of their protection," wrote Senior U.S. District Judge Lowell Reed Jr., who presided over a four-week trial last fall. The law would have criminalized Web sites that allow children to access material deemed "harmful to minors" by "contemporary community standards." The sites would have been expected to require a credit card number or other proof of age. Penalties included a $50,000 fine and up to six months in prison.
Tags Legal Privacy
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0 Comments
March 11, 2007

FBI Investigation Broke Laws

Poster: Logan King
Posted on March 11, 2007 at 6:04:04 PM
What a surprise! Patriot Act being misused. Who saw such a revolutionary scandal coming?

Linky

Said By CNet

The FBI has repeatedly misused the Patriot Act's extraordinary surveillance powers by obtaining information on Americans unlawfully, the Justice Department's inspector general said Friday in a report that already has drawn promises of a congressional investigation.
Tags News Privacy Politics
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3 Comments
February 13, 2007

Implantable RFID: Not Yet

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on February 13, 2007 at 12:02:14 AM
Thankfully... It seems that doctors aren't too willing to put chips in people's arms just yet. I'm sorry, I fully DO NOT support this. RFID is a cool concept for packages, not for making sheeple.

Quote

Part of the problem is likely the lackluster sales for the company's most famous product. Only 222 medical patients in total have opted to get RFID chips from VeriChip implanted as of the end of 2006, according to documents filed by the company with the Securities and Exchange Commission as part of its initial public offering. It's a modest number, the company says, and revenue for these systems is far below projections. "To date, we have only generated approximately $0.1 million in revenue ($100,000) from sales of the microchip inserter kits, significantly less than we had projected at the beginning of 2006. We may never achieve market acceptance or more than nominal or modest sales of this system," the company stated.


I hope this company gets buried.
Tags RFID Privacy
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4 Comments
January 20, 2007

Spank your child? Go to Jail.

Poster: Logan King
Posted on January 20, 2007 at 1:16:43 AM
Linky.

Said By The article

Assemblywoman Sally Lieber, D-Mountain View, wants to outlaw spanking children up to 3 years old. If she succeeds, California would become the first state in the nation to explicitly ban parents from smacking their kids.

Making a swat on the behind a misdemeanor might seem a bit much for some -- and the chances of the idea becoming law appear slim, at best -- but Lieber begs to differ.

"I think it's pretty hard to argue you need to beat a child 3 years old or younger," Lieber said. "Is it OK to whip a 1-year-old or a 6-month-old or a newborn?"

The bill, which is still being drafted, will be written broadly, she added, prohibiting ``any striking of a child, any corporal punishment, smacking, hitting, punching, any of that.'' Lieber said it would be a misdemeanor, punishable by up to a year in jail or a fine up to $1,000, although a legal expert advising her on the proposal said first-time offenders would probably only have to attend parenting classes.

Are all California legislators this stupid?
Tags News privacy
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3 Comments
January 4, 2007

Violation Of Privacy: Bush Says Feds Can Open Mail Without Warrant

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on January 4, 2007 at 6:07:48 PM
Say it with me, "Go screw yourself Bush." This is illegal. First class mail is protected BY LAW. I love how Bush thinks he can do something against the law because he is the president. Sorry, no man is above the law in America... or so I'm told.

Quote

Most of the Postal Accountability and Enhancement Act deals with mundane changes. But the legislation also explicitly reinforces protections of first-class mail from searches without a court's approval. Yet, in his statement, Bush said he will "construe" an exception, "which provides for opening of an item of a class of mail otherwise sealed against inspection in a manner consistent ... with the need to conduct searches in exigent circumstances."


How can the executive branch tack on stuff like this when the bill is signed? This seems wrong. I don't remember this crazy stuff happening before this asshat went into office.
Tags Government Legal Privacy
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6 Comments
December 26, 2006

UK Cameras Fitted With Speakers

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on December 26, 2006 at 2:40:18 PM
This seems like a particular movie that I like to speak about, doesn't it? I reported about this before, but it is so bad that I need to bring it up again. Attaching speakers to cameras will allow the government to actively police every single person in a bad way. This is not how society should function. There needs to be personal interaction. Talk about invasion of privacy.

Quote

During the past decade, the government has spent 500 million pounds ($1 billion) on spy cameras and now has one for every 14 citizens, according to a September report prepared for Information Commissioner Richard Thomas by the Surveillance Studies Network, a panel of U.K. academics. Who's In Charge? At a single road junction in the London borough of Hammersmith, there are 29 cameras run by police, government, private companies and transport agencies. Police officers are even trying out video cameras mounted on their heads. "We've got to stand back and see where technology is taking us,'' said Thomas, whose job is to protect people's privacy. "Humans must dictate our future, not machines.''
Tags Rights Government Privacy
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2 Comments
November 14, 2006

Stupid: Mobile Phone Tracking

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on November 14, 2006 at 2:50:40 PM
No, I'll take my privacy over my friend's ease of finding me. Would you want a phone service that allows your friends to track you? I don't think so.

Quote

Boost Mobile, a so-called mobile virtual network operator owned by Sprint Nextel, will offer a two-hour demonstration of buddy-tracking technology created by a start-up called Loopt. The start-up, founded by two Stanford University graduates while they were still students, is the latest to offer a mobile tracking system that allows people to do things like get a bead on friends' whereabouts. It certainly won't be the last. For nearly a decade, technology visionaries have talked of a day when people would be able to use their cell phones to get directions, track their friends, keep tabs on their kids or simply find the nearest coffee shop. Now those services are finally starting to take trickle into the marketplace.
Tags Mobile Privacy
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12 Comments
October 5, 2006

HP's Dunn Indicted

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on October 5, 2006 at 2:09:55 PM
The CA attorney general has brought charges against former HP chairwomen Patricia Dunn. There may be jail time in store if the trials goes through. Justice should be served.

Quote

The complaint alleges that Dunn and Hunsaker knew that HP's outside investigators were obtaining personal phone records through false pretenses - usually by lying to phone company employees - and that both "facilitated" the use of the ruse, which Lockyer says is illegal. The defendants, if convicted, face a maximum of 12 years in prison and a $30,000 fine.
Tags Company HP Legal Privacy
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0 Comments

Vista To Control Your Computer

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on October 5, 2006 at 1:47:18 PM
Microsoft will have complete control over your computer with its genuine disadvantage program. The program will now be able to severely lock out the computer from use if you have a 'nonlegit' copy. Basically, Microsoft owns you.

Quote

Under that scenario, a person could use the browser to surf the Web, access documents on the hard drive or log onto Web-based e-mail. But the user would not be able to directly open documents from the computer desktop or run other programs such as Outlook e-mail software, Lindeman said. Microsoft said it won't stop a computer running pirated Vista software from working completely, and it will continue to deliver critical security updates. Still, the much harsher tactics contrast to Microsoft's earlier anti-piracy measures, which have involved instituting tougher piracy checks for Windows XP users who want to get free add-ons such as anti-spyware programs. In most cases, these were seen as annoying, rather than debilitating.
Tags Software Microsoft Privacy
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6 Comments
September 26, 2006

Telecoms Feeling The Pretexting Heat

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on September 26, 2006 at 1:44:57 PM
I think privacy violations like these should be held accountable by the company that wanted the information and the company that failed to protect the consumer details. HP and these telecoms should be brought up and made an example of.

Quote

Some telecom providers appear to have bolstered their security earlier this year after pretexting became the subject of congressional hearings and private lawsuits unrelated to HP's current woes. AT&T said last week that in a memo to its call centers it put in place additional verification requirements, though the company would not detail those measures. Cingular said it no longer permitted its representatives to divulge records of phone calls over the phone to customers. The HP investigators who placed pretext calls used remarkable ingenuity in extracting information from the telecommunications companies--this technique of getting people to divulge confidential information is broadly known as "social engineering."
Tags Rights Privacy
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1 Comment
September 14, 2006

The USA Turns ILLEGAL

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on September 14, 2006 at 1:52:03 PM
Troubling times are ahead for all American citizens. I am ashamed to even say that I'm an American after I read this piece of shit legislation going through. This illegal warrantless wiretapping bill MUST be voted down. OUR CIVIL LIBERTIES ARE AT STAKE. Call your senators now and tell them to VOTE THIS BILL DOWN.

Quote

* Redefines surveillance so that only programs that catch the substance of a communication need oversight. Any government surveillance that captures, analyzes and stores patterns of communications such as phone records, or e-mail and website addresses, is no longer considered surveillance.
* Expands the section of law that allows the attorney general to authorize spying on foreign embassies, so long as there's no "substantial likelihood" that an American's communication would be captured.
* Repeals the provision of federal law that allows the government unfettered wiretapping and physical searches without warrants or notification for 15 days after a declaration of war. The lack of any congressional restraint on the president's wartime powers arguably puts the president at the height, rather than the ebb, of his powers in any time of war, even an undeclared one.
* Repeals the provision of federal law that limits the government's wartime powers to conduct warrantless wiretapping and physical searches to a period of 15 days after a declaration of war.
* Repeals the provision of federal law that puts a time limit on the government's wartime powers to conduct warrantless wiretapping and physical searches against Americans. Under current law, the president has that power for only 15 days following a declaration of war.
* Allows the attorney general, or anyone he or she designates, to authorize widespread domestic spying, such as monitoring all instant-messaging systems in the country, so long as the government promises to delete anything not terrorism-related.
* Moves all court challenges to the NSA surveillance program to a secretive court in Washington, D.C., comprised of judges appointed by the Chief Justice of the Supreme Court. Only government lawyers would be allowed in the courtroom.
* Allows the government to get warrants for surveillance programs as a whole, instead of having to describe to a judge the particular persons to be monitored and the methods to be used.
Tags Rights Legal Privacy
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14 Comments
August 29, 2006

In the UK, Your DNA Is Safe

Poster: Aron Schatz
Posted on August 29, 2006 at 1:22:11 PM
A major score for the privacy (a civil right!) people. There is an act in the UK that makes DNA analysis without consent illegal. Good for the UK.

Quote

The new law, part of the Human Tissue Act 2004, makes it illegal to take a sample of someone's DNA and have it analysed without obtaining their consent. Employers tempted to use DNA to check up on staff, or insurance companies on their policy holders, will be prevented from doing so. "The incredible thing about DNA is that it has impact not only on one person but on their whole family's privacy too," says Kennedy. "Suppose some prominent figure in politics was suspected of not being the father of a child and a tabloid got hold of a sample."
Tags News DNA Privacy
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0 Comments
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