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Microsoft Open Source Privacy Your Rights Online

Former Microsoft Privacy Chief Doesn't Trust Company, Uses Open Source Software 199

MojoKid writes "Microsoft's onetime Chief Privacy Advisor, Caspar Bowden, has come out with a vote of no-confidence in the company's long-term privacy measures and ability or interest to secure user data in the wake of the NSA's PRISM program. From 2002 — 2011, Bowden was in charge of privacy at Microsoft, and oversaw the company's efforts in that area in more than 40 countries, but claims to have been unaware of the PRISM program's existence while he worked at the company. In the two years since leaving Microsoft, Bowden has ceased carrying a cell phone and become a staunch open source user, claiming that he no longer trusts a program unless he can see the source."
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Former Microsoft Privacy Chief Doesn't Trust Company, Uses Open Source Software

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  • Good for him (Score:5, Insightful)

    by techsoldaten ( 309296 ) on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @10:57AM (#45002813) Journal

    Without assigning any kind of reason to his shift in attitudes - it's refreshing to see a privacy officer come out like this. I can't think of a reason any CPOs should act differently.

  • by Taco Cowboy ( 5327 ) on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @11:05AM (#45002925) Journal

    ... use caution in everything we do.

    There is no way we can understand everything. There are just too many things out there that we use daily - even software alone consist of so many layers ( from the spreadsheet software program that we use, to the device drivers, the OS, to the embedded firmwares residing inside the chips, to the myriad mix of software that keep the Net humming.

    Yes, I know, it is no fun.

    The paranoids have a point, after all --- BIG BROTHERS (plural) want to know everything about us.

  • Message received (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Tokolosh ( 1256448 ) on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @11:07AM (#45002949)

    Recent history teaches us that he knows things that he is not allowed to talk about. This is his way of legally signalling that all is not well.

    We have congresscritters trying to send the same message, without being labeled "traitors". See http://www.wyden.senate.gov/news/press-releases/wyden-udall-statement-on-reports-of-compliance-violations-made-under-nsa-collection-programs [senate.gov]

  • by Fnord666 ( 889225 ) on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @11:21AM (#45003131) Journal

    even software alone consist of so many layers ( from the spreadsheet software program that we use, to the device drivers, the OS, to the embedded firmwares residing inside the chips, to the myriad mix of software that keep the Net humming.

    Don't forget the compilers and linkers that build the software. The source may look fine, but where did the compiler come from?

  • by turgid ( 580780 ) on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @11:33AM (#45003283) Journal

    You're not thinking cynically enough.

    With my Slashdot ubiquitous Microsoft Shill hat on consider the following.

    If you don't like/trust/use Microsoft, you are immature and stupid and a stinking long-haired communist FOSS hippy.

    Someone from the company you HATE leaves the company and announces that they don't trust their former employer which also happens to be the company you HATE, and that they have converted to the FOSS way.

    That means what you suspected all along is true! Right?

    Ah but, it's a trap! You see, the FOSS is back-doored to high heaven as well and all this is a psychological trick to make you feel secure and validated in your own mind.

    Muhahahhahahhahah! Elop will soon rule the galaxy.

  • by mcgrew ( 92797 ) * on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @01:02PM (#45004345) Homepage Journal

    There is no way we can understand everything.

    True, but one can understand everything about something, and enough of everything to get by. If you know how electricity and electronic components work, how logic gates and ALUs work, know assembly and higher level languages you can pretty much understand enough.

    The secret is reading LOTS of books and then practicing. Unfortunately, 97% of the population are aliterate -- they can read, but don't. I don't understand those people! Probably never will.

  • citizen or no (Score:4, Insightful)

    by sacrilicious ( 316896 ) <qbgfynfu.opt@recursor.net> on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @02:00PM (#45005015) Homepage

    As Bowden goes on to point out, if you aren't a US citizen, you have no protection whatsoever from PRISM.

    Um, and if I'm a citizen, I'm protected from prism? Nuh uh.

  • Re:Good for him (Score:5, Insightful)

    by bill_mcgonigle ( 4333 ) * on Tuesday October 01, 2013 @02:50PM (#45005657) Homepage Journal

    He seems to have gone a little too "tinfoil-hat" for my tastes. He doesn't carry a cell phone anymore. I think that says a lot more than becoming an open source user.

    If the government mandated that everybody carry a tracking device, keep it on at all times, and that they'd be storing the tracking data in perpetuity, there'd be a goddamn revolution.

    But when they do so voluntarily, and the NSA steals all that data - leading to the exact same end point - people are all like, "oh, look, Walter White is twerking again."

    At least this guy is being true to his privacy milieu.

An authority is a person who can tell you more about something than you really care to know.

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