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11 votes
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After releasing full database of LGBTQ dating website, Black Shadow hackers leak medical records of 290,000 Israeli patients
9 votes -
Can data die? Why one of the internet's oldest images lives on without its subject's consent.
27 votes -
The World Series was rigged. Hugh Fullerton's revolutionary analysis backed it up. But in 1919 his calls were ignored by a game now transformed by data.
4 votes -
New study raises fresh ‘privacy concerns’ about data sharing from Android mobile phones
6 votes -
Amazon copied products and rigged search results to promote its own brands, documents show
20 votes -
Approximate data deletion from machine learning models
3 votes -
All the ways Netflix tracks you and what you watch
9 votes -
The entirety of Twitch has reportedly been leaked
42 votes -
Company that routes SMS for all major US carriers was hacked for five years
27 votes -
The NYT's partisan tale about COVID and the unvaccinated is rife with sloppy data analysis
2 votes -
Anonymous leaks gigabytes of data from alt-right web host Epik
31 votes -
Valtteri Bottas is leaving Mercedes after five years – but just how well did he stack up against his team mate
5 votes -
McDonald's leaks password for Monopoly VIP database to winners
16 votes -
Why lying about storage products is bad: An IBM DeskStar story
12 votes -
After data is posted on conspiracy site, Colorado county's voting machines are banned
12 votes -
Xsolla fires 150 employees based on big data analysis of their activity
14 votes -
Zoom to pay $85M for lying about encryption and sending data to Facebook and Google
28 votes -
Mental health response teams yield better outcomes than police in NYC, data shows
14 votes -
LinkedIn breach reportedly exposes data of 92% of users, including inferred salaries
13 votes -
780GB of data, tools, and source code were stolen from EA by purchasing a stolen cookie to get access to the company's Slack and social-engineering an IT Support employee
21 votes -
How to make your data harder to find online
7 votes -
Why we should end the data economy
7 votes -
EU set to unveil digital wallet fit for post-Covid life
7 votes -
Spreadsheet horror stories
9 votes -
1099s and Tenderness: Papa Health
2 votes -
Huge Eufy privacy breach shows live and recorded cam feeds to strangers
5 votes -
They told their therapists everything. Hackers leaked it all.
15 votes -
Getting kinky for the sake of data
4 votes -
Alleged $366M Bitcoin mixer busted after analysis of ten years of blockchain data
10 votes -
Proctoring tools and dragnet investigations rob students of due process
19 votes -
Bad software sent postal workers to jail, because no one wanted to admit it could be wrong
20 votes -
Solving the vaccine data problem
7 votes -
533 million Facebook users' phone numbers and personal data have been leaked online
29 votes -
If humankind left Earth and came back after 100 years, how much of our digital files would still be readable?
That's something that concerns me a lot. A lot of what we know about our history came from analog media that was preserved throughout history. Will future generations (100, 200, 1000 years from...
That's something that concerns me a lot. A lot of what we know about our history came from analog media that was preserved throughout history. Will future generations (100, 200, 1000 years from now...) be able to access our digital documents to understand how we lived?
Edit: the scenario I proposed in the title was just a way to express my concerns more concisely. I don't think it will actually happen but answering it is equivalent to addressing my concerns..
24 votes -
Engineer reports data leak to nonprofit, hears from the police
11 votes -
There’s no migrant ‘surge’ at the US southern border. Here’s the data.
9 votes -
Privacy is a commons
3 votes -
Data Transfer Project
6 votes -
Gab removes their public Git repository after it reveals their developers adding (and struggling to fix) basic security issues that led to a 70GB data leak
12 votes -
Three years later: Did the GDPR actually work?
7 votes -
US Census Bureau announces delay in data needed for redistricting to the end of September
5 votes -
1-pixel wealth: Wealth in the United States, shown to scale
60 votes -
How do you manage data backups?
Hi Tildes. Hopefully this thread will be both a good discussion and helpful to some of you, and hopefully me. As I'm guessing most of you know, data backups are quite important and it is best to...
Hi Tildes. Hopefully this thread will be both a good discussion and helpful to some of you, and hopefully me.
As I'm guessing most of you know, data backups are quite important and it is best to have at least one copy locally and another copy somewhere else. At the moment, I store photos on an external hard drive and Google Drive, photos from my phone on Google Photos with copies of important original quality files saved locally, and everything else on drives in my PC and a network drive on my Raspberry Pi. It's far from ideal, I've only got one copy of some files and three or four of some others so I've been looking for something better to keep everything organised, safe and in one place.
I've tried the free trial of Backblaze, which seemed the obvious choice, but it had a few problems. I couldn't backup my Pi's network share, and in general it's a bit clunky and difficult to use. It is marketed as an easy solution to backing up data, but in doing this it just makes everything more difficult, at least for me - I know what I want backed up, and I would prefer to select it manually, but by opting in everything for backup by default you have to spend ages excluding the folders you don't want saved, one-by-one, in a UI that is difficult to use and often unclear. Sometimes the exclusions list just doesn't work - the Program Files folders are meant to be excluded by default and they were listed under exclusions but were backing up anyway. For me it found over 200,000 files, and because they were all so small it barely managed to backup 100MB in three hours. (Not that I know where the files come from because they aren't listed in the Windows app in any vaguely comprehensible way.)
So I need to find something else, and I was hoping someone here would have some recommendations. Personally I need it to:
- Be affordable and easy to setup and use
- Backup external and network drives to the cloud (physically keeping another drive somewhere else isn't an option for me)
- Be trustworthy and have strong commitments to security and privacy
- Work well for my use case: preferably automatic from Windows
Looking forward to any comments or recommendations. Thanks!
23 votes -
70TB of Parler users’ messages, videos, and posts leaked by security researchers
42 votes -
WhatsApp gives users an ultimatum: Share data with Facebook or stop using the app
28 votes -
Privacy is a collective concern
4 votes -
Why do Biden's votes not follow Benford's Law? Debunking an election fraud claim.
24 votes -
Are Black people more homophobic than white people? Crunching the numbers on Black people's views of gay people
9 votes -
FTC issues orders to Amazon, TikTok, Discord, Facebook, Reddit, Snap, Twitter, WhatsApp, and YouTube seeking data about practices related to personal information, advertising, and user engagement
29 votes