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7 votes
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One in ten people with a Medicare card have chosen to opt out of the new My Health Record digital health system, more than 2.5 million Australians in total
3 votes -
Startpage's Anonymous view allows us to view web pages anonymously.
The new Startpage.com Anonymous View feature has been tweaked since it was first released at the end of last year. Startpage.com developed Anonymous View to fix a major privacy gap with any...
The new Startpage.com Anonymous View feature has been tweaked since it was first released at the end of last year.
Startpage.com developed Anonymous View to fix a major privacy gap with any private search engine: once you click on one of the links you find and establish a direct connection with the third party website, you're back in the Wild West of Tracking. This website can see who you are, place cookies on your browser and track your behavior, including the links you click on and pages you view. This defeats part of the benefits of private search.
Anonymous View fixes this privacy problem AND fixes the perennial problem of proxies that only display part of a page or break without JavaScript. Anonymous View uses JS while protecting your privacy -- even preventing fingerprinting by masking your user agent information
PS : This is from a reddit post
8 votes -
The US government and Facebook are negotiating a record, multibillion-dollar fine for the company’s privacy lapses
24 votes -
How did the police know you were near a crime scene? Google told them
10 votes -
Facebook charged with misleading users on health data visibility
8 votes -
Data privacy bill unites Charles Koch and Big Tech
6 votes -
Future of personal security and privacy, upcoming trends.
A few years ago I got into improving my knowledgebase of personal security - theory and tools - but it didn't go much farther than reinforcing everything with 2FA and setting up a password...
A few years ago I got into improving my knowledgebase of personal security - theory and tools - but it didn't go much farther than reinforcing everything with 2FA and setting up a password manager, plus setting up a VPN and full disk encryption.
It seems like we're amidst a rising tide of data breaches due to, IMHO, laziness and cheapness on the part of many companies storing personal data.
So, recently I've embarked on my second journey to improve my own security via habits and software and teaching myself. Privacytools has been a super helpful resource. My main lesson this time is to take ownership/responsibility for my own data. To that end, I have switched to KeyPass with yubikey 2FA (still trying to figure out how to get 2FA with yubi on my android without NFC), moved over to Joplin for my note taking (away from Google and Evernote) and also switched to NextCloud for all of my data storage and synchronization. I'm also de-Googling myself, current due-date is end of March when Inbox is shut down.
So my question / discussion topic here, is, what are everyone's thoughts on the future of practical personal security and privacy? More decentralization and self-hosting? That's what it looks like to me. Blockchain tech would be cool for public objects like news articles, images etc. but from what I understand that has zero implication for anything personal. The other newish tech is PGP signatures, which I'm still having trouble implementing/finding use for, but surely that will change.
There is this topic but that ended up just being about encryption which I think is a no-brainer at this point. I'm more so looking for the leading edge trends.
17 votes -
Why humanitarians are worried about Palantir’s new partnership with the UN
8 votes -
Even years later, Twitter doesn’t delete your direct messages
4 votes -
Valentine's Day *privacy not included
10 votes -
Facebook uses its apps to track users it thinks could threaten employees and offices
6 votes -
Forget privacy: you're terrible at targeting anyway
45 votes -
Many popular iPhone apps secretly record your screen without asking
23 votes -
Securing and improving privacy on macOS
13 votes -
Telcos sold highly sensitive customer GPS data
4 votes -
Hundreds of Bounty Hunters Had Access to AT&T, T-Mobile, and Sprint Customer Location Data for Years
10 votes -
Millions are on the move in China, and Big Data is watching
9 votes -
Goodbye Big Five: Kashmir Hill tried to block each of Amazon, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Apple from her life for a week. To end the experiment, she tried to block all five at once.
19 votes -
What I learned from the hacker who spied on me
7 votes -
The "Do Not Track" Setting Doesn't Stop You from Being Tracked
20 votes -
The Age of Surveillance Capitalism by Shoshana Zuboff review – we are the pawns
7 votes -
Inrupt releases React SDK for Solid
6 votes -
Google is also abusing Apple's Developer Enterprise Program to distribute a data-collection app
24 votes -
I cut Google out of my life. It screwed up everything
38 votes -
Major iPhone FaceTime bug lets you hear the audio of the person you are calling before they pick up
25 votes -
Facebook moves to block ad transparency tools- including ours
8 votes -
Thieves of experience: How Google and Facebook corrupted capitalism
6 votes -
The CNIL has imposed a penalty of fifty million euros against Google for breaches of the GDPR
12 votes -
Netflix, YouTube, Amazon and Apple accused of GDPR breach
27 votes -
Twitter's Android app disabled "protect my tweets" when other settings were changed, potentially making private tweets public
12 votes -
Privacy and Politics
I was thinking about the intersection of internet privacy and politics. You could even say I was having a bit of a mini-crisis. I like to think of myself as being pretty liberal, but I wondering...
I was thinking about the intersection of internet privacy and politics. You could even say I was having a bit of a mini-crisis. I like to think of myself as being pretty liberal, but I wondering how that fits into privacy. I was a little upset when I learned that Obama called Edward Snowden unpatriotic. I was kind of thinking that what he did was patriotic. Wasn't the NSA monitoring US citizens without warrants. That's morally wrong right? I think I would be pretty fine with the government monitoring someone if they had a warrant given to them by a non-secret court. I'm wondering if anyone here can give me some insight on this or if anyone else feels/has felt this way.
4 votes -
DuckDuckGo will use Apple Maps in search results
27 votes -
Pew study: 74% of Facebook users did not know Facebook was maintaining a list of their interests/traits, 51% were uncomfortable with it, and 27% felt the list was inaccurate
21 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garage—a system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
For owners of Amazon’s Ring security cameras, strangers may have been watching too
10 votes -
(Don't) return to sender: How to protect yourself from email tracking
13 votes -
T-Mobile, Sprint, and AT&T Are Selling Customers' Real-Time Location Data, And It's Falling Into the Wrong Hands
29 votes -
How Facebook tracks you on Android
18 votes -
Hey Google! When did I ask you to access my Purchase details?
5 votes -
Roger Dingledine - Next generation Tor onion services
5 votes -
Chinese schools monitor students activities, targeting truancy with 'intelligent uniforms'
Straight from the horse's mouth - China's own Global Times: Chinese schools monitor students activities, targeting truancy with 'intelligent uniforms' A different view - the Australian...
Straight from the horse's mouth - China's own Global Times: Chinese schools monitor students activities, targeting truancy with 'intelligent uniforms'
A different view - the Australian Broadcasting Commission: Chinese schools enforce 'smart uniforms' with GPS tracking system to monitor students
11 votes -
How Google tracks your personal information
7 votes -
At Blind, a security lapse revealed private complaints from Silicon Valley employees
13 votes -
Should I be using a VPN constantly?
Do you? What do you recommend?
16 votes -
Advocating for privacy in Australia
9 votes -
Amazon sends 1,700 Alexa voice recordings to a random person
17 votes -
Potential impact of two IoT security and privacy laws on tech industry
6 votes -
Internal documents show that Facebook gave Microsoft, Amazon, Spotify and others far greater access to people’s data than it has disclosed
25 votes -
Google’s secret China project “effectively ended” after internal confrontation
12 votes