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4 votes
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Comparison between several messenger systems
9 votes -
Internet hacking is about to get much worse - We can no longer leave online security to the market
22 votes -
Google's beefing up user data privacy (which includes shutting down Google+)
42 votes -
Why do you lock your smartphone?
I'm genuinely curious. I'm a late adopter FWIW and am still rocking an older iPhone that doesn't support any face recognition or finger prints. But I don't use a pass code either, and never have,...
I'm genuinely curious. I'm a late adopter FWIW and am still rocking an older iPhone that doesn't support any face recognition or finger prints. But I don't use a pass code either, and never have, and doubt I ever will. I just don't get it... what are folks afraid of happening if they don't lock their phone? I suppose the "nightmare" scenario would be someone steals your phone and then messages your contacts asking for $. Is that it?
I've always practiced greater digital security than physical security (counting the phone unlock as physical) as I think it much more likely that a ne'er-do-well would attack some large company than to single me out in person. I mean if the FBI or some hacker is going through my garbage then I probably have larger problems, right?
For me it's cost/benefit - swiping/fingerprinting/face IDing multiple times a day is not worth the slim chance that my phone is stolen by someone who going to use the info in it for something nefarious. I wouldn't lock my car if I was in/out of 20x a day, I just wouldn't leave anything terribly valuable in it.
Please let me know why locking your phone is/isn't important to you.
EDIT: To be clear, I have one banking app and it requires an additional password to get in. It's an app so there isn't a saved password for it anywhere.
EDIT2: Made this as a comment below, but thought I'd add it up here as well - "I find it strange that people in general seem to be OK with putting up with an inconvenience (even though minor to many) that affects them multiple times a day, but we hold large companies almost wholly unaccountable for major data breaches. "
EDIT3: This just occurred to me. We lock our phones, but not our wallets/purses. The argument that a pass-code is a protection against identity theft rings sort of hollow when we consider we have much of the same info on an ID card that we keep unprotected. Some states will even list the SSN on a driver's license.
EDIT4: I'm convinced everyone thinks their personal lives are terribly interesting to strangers and my suspicion is they're not. Only two real cases of bad things happening when a phone is unlocked that I've counted so far: 1) long distance calls 2) pokemon themed contacts.
EDIT5: That said, sounds like the fingerprint scanner is the way to go for convenient security. I'll be checking that out. Sincere thanks!
EDIT6: Some folks said that edit 4 came off as condescending. Not my intention. I was trying to tie in the idea of "everyone being the main character in their own story." I'm definitely not implying that people should leave their phones unlocked because others wouldn't find their lives uninteresting.
I think many have a personal connection to their devices that I do not feel. Intellectually I find that very interesting as this seems less a monetary issue and more a privacy issue. It'd be as if a stranger picked up a lost diary and started reading. I fear my diary would be more like a ship captain's logbook and wholly uninteresting. If I were to have my phone stolen I'd simply change a couple passwords and buy a new one.
32 votes -
DNS security is a decades-old issue that shows no signs of being fully resolved. Here's a quick overview of some of the problems with proposed solutions and the best way to move forward.
9 votes -
Windows Controlled Folder Access
I recently enabled controlled folder access in Windows 10. It restricts programs from modifying folders in a blacklist. I have all of the music/pictures/videos/documents/desktop folders and...
I recently enabled controlled folder access in Windows 10. It restricts programs from modifying folders in a blacklist.
I have all of the music/pictures/videos/documents/desktop folders and folders containing backups added, is there anything else I should consider adding?
7 votes -
Did Facebook learn anything from the Cambridge Analytica debacle? An even bigger data breach suggests it didn’t.
14 votes -
Supply chain security is the whole enchilada, but who’s willing to pay for it?
13 votes -
Making sense of the Supermicro motherboard attack
14 votes -
Weak default passwords for internet-connected devices banned in California from 2020
19 votes -
This tech would have spotted the secret Chinese chip in seconds
7 votes -
A Critical Look at Sovereign Identity Startups
4 votes -
Travellers to New Zealand refusing digital search now face NZ$5000 Customs fine at border
15 votes -
Trustworthy Chrome Extensions, by default
6 votes -
iPhone iOS passcode bypass hack exposes contacts, photos
8 votes -
Facebook "View As" security issue affecting fifty million accounts: "attackers exploited" it to "steal Facebook access tokens" and "take over people’s accounts"
21 votes -
US Secret Service warns of surge in ATM ‘wiretapping’ attacks
9 votes -
WireGuard v6 might be ready for the mainline kernel
11 votes -
Police body cameras are hackable and policy lags behind, warns security analyst
6 votes -
Introducing Firefox Monitor, helping people take control after a data breach
24 votes -
Illegal streams, decrypting m3u8's, and building a better stream experience
14 votes -
For hackers, anonymity was once critical. That’s changing.
10 votes -
Bitcoin Core CVE-2018-17144 - "includes both a Denial of Service component and a critical inflation vulnerability"
10 votes -
NCIX Data Breach - after bankruptcy, terabytes of unencrypted customer/company data have been sold to multiple buyers
20 votes -
US mobile giants want to be your online identity
11 votes -
What steps do you take to secure your online use and privacy?
I do the following: Use a VPN (NordVPN) Use Firefox with a tweaked about:config and the following security extensions: uBlock Origin NoScript HTTPS Everywhere Privacy Badger Decentraleyes Cookie...
I do the following:
- Use a VPN (NordVPN)
- Use Firefox with a tweaked about:config and the following security extensions:
- uBlock Origin
- NoScript
- HTTPS Everywhere
- Privacy Badger
- Decentraleyes
- Cookie Autodelete
- Skip Redirect
- CanvasBlocker
- Run Linux Mint (I know, Ubuntu-based distros aren't ideal but I'm a Linux beginner)
- Don't have any social media as of a year ago
- Don't use any Google services, including YouTube, Google Search, or Gmail
- Use a password manager (KeePassXC)
The next step would be for me to switch from iPhone to Android running Lineage OS, but money is a bit tight right now. As for day-to-day lifestyle choices, I try to use cash whenever possible and never sign up for things like store rewards programs.
What's your setup? Do you consider yourself a privacy-minded individual? Are you more concerned with protecting yourself from corporate or government entities?
46 votes -
The Effectiveness of Publicly Shaming Bad Security
21 votes -
Trend Micro says sorry after apps grabbed Mac browser history
6 votes -
xkcd 2044: Sandboxing Cycle
37 votes -
Google and Certbot: Let's Encrypt not renewing certs for sites Google flags
17 votes -
UN begins talks on world’s first treaty to regulate high seas
7 votes -
Fundamentals of penetration testing
9 votes -
Water Security: The Fragile Desalination Infrastructure of the Arabian Gulf
9 votes -
Browser extensions: Are they worth the risk?
18 votes -
New Release: Tor Browser 8.0 [based on Firefox Quantum]
15 votes -
"Disable SMT/Hyperthreading in all Intel BIOSes"
23 votes -
Should Grindr users worry about what China will do with their data?
16 votes -
Making C less dangerous
16 votes -
The Performance Cost Of Spectre, Meltdown, & Foreshadow Mitigations On Linux 4.19 with Intel & AMD processors
14 votes -
Here's why your static website needs HTTPS
30 votes -
Venmo's public API exposes millions of transactions, startling users
10 votes -
Phone Numbers Were Never Meant as ID. Now We’re All At Risk
22 votes -
Epic's first Fortnite Installer allowed hackers to download and install anything on your Android phone silently
26 votes -
Over 1400 Western Australian government officials used 'Password123' as their password
27 votes -
How I recorded user behaviour on my competitor’s websites
32 votes -
Intel Publishes Microcode Security Patches, No Benchmarking Or Comparison Allowed!
12 votes -
How One Guy Hacked BlackHat 2018
16 votes -
OpenSSH Username Enumeration Vulnerabilty
11 votes -
Observatory by Mozilla
28 votes