Privacy Resolutions for the New Year 116
Chris Hoofnagle writes "EPIC has released ten privacy resolutions for the New Year. In addition to losing weight next year, lose all those data brokers who are after your bits."
No spitting on the Bus! Thank you, The Mgt.
Paranoia? (Score:1)
Re:Paranoia? (Score:1)
Re:Paranoia? (Score:2, Interesting)
Maybe that will void your warranty?
Re:Paranoia? (Score:5, Insightful)
* " Don't return product warranty cards."
Maybe that will void your warranty?
Bull. Go back to the store you purchased your faulty device at and they'll take it back under warranty. No warranty card needed.
* " If you have to use a supermarket shopping card, be sure to exchange it with your friends or with strangers. "
Why not? If nothing else, you'll help your friends/strangers save money and preserve their own personal data, and you'll boost your points rating.
* " Pay with cash where possible. Electronic transactions leave a detailed dossier of your activities that can be accessed by the government or sold to telemarketers. "
Many police cases are solved by following credit card trails. Even the WTC terrorists could have been stopped by following their credit card activities. So I expect you'll say "fine, I'm no criminal! why should I worry?". Well, maybe you'll think about it next time you go buy a bottle of scotch at your local convenience store late at night, and the FBI come banging at your door a week later when it turns out that convenience store was held by Ali Bin Terror and they're arresting and detaining everybody who has been in contact with him, "just in case".
Re:Paranoia? (Score:1)
Why not? If nothing else, you'll help your friends/strangers save money and preserve their own personal data, and you'll boost your points rating.
Here we get coupons with our name on it and it is non-transferable. Although, if you have followed the steps mentioned in the article you wouldn't get the coupon in the first place but that's a different story. Also, if its transferable, how would i
Re:Paranoia? (Score:3)
Even the WTC terrorists could have been stopped by following their credit card activities.
Do you really beleive that's true? I don't.
This might be an interesting read. [www.cbc.ca]
Re:Paranoia? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Paranoia? (Score:1)
So in other words: don't buy anything online... how about no.
Re:Paranoia? (Score:2)
Re:Paranoia? (Score:3, Informative)
Nope don't do the warranty card. Do read it, but, 99.9% of the time, it is NOT needed to get your warranty, and it is used for NOTHING more than compiling information on you. I used to work for Acxiom years back...a company in Conway ,AR that has information on about 98% of the people in the US. This was 7 years ago...they are working worldwide now. They told us about the warranty card thing...back then, I looked...most of them wer
Plausible Deniability Virus (Score:5, Insightful)
Then when your employer, the **AA, Microsoft, the FBI, or your spouse starts complaining about what thet found due to our lack of privacy, you could say "It might have been the PlausDen.A virus - not me!"
Not that I personally want this virus installed on my system... I just want the possibility that I may have had the virus.
Re:Plausible Deniability Virus (Score:1)
EPIC 2014 (Score:5, Interesting)
2014 = today? (Score:1)
Very scary-yet-insightful indeed, BUT: This is different from the media landscape we have today, ... ehhh, how?
Re:EPIC 2014 (Score:2)
Re:EPIC 2014 (Score:2)
the new york times offline - that will be the day
i especially liked "googlezon", and the pseudo-lawrence-fishbourne narrator.
Re:EPIC 2014 (Score:3, Insightful)
I'd like to be the first here to say that flash movie was not insightful, and the only thing scary about it is that they managed to find someone who could recite that cheezy monologue without busting out laughing. "No, try it again.. This time make it hushed AND excited!!!"
LOL
Re:EPIC 2014 (Score:2)
Cash purchases (Score:1, Interesting)
Ok, sure I use cash, but what do you tell cashiers who ask for your home phone number or even street address?
And if you work for a retailer who makes you ask these questions, how are you supposed to deal with customers who don't want to give out this info?
Re:Cash purchases (Score:5, Informative)
If you work for a retailer and are forced to ask, ask politely if the client wish to give some info. I'm just a client and I really appreciate when I'm asked instead of trying to answering their threatening demands.
Re:Cash purchases (Score:2)
Re:Cash purchases (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Cash purchases (Score:2, Funny)
Hmm might try that next time I get the hot chick at Best Buy
Re:Cash purchases (Score:1)
Re:Cash purchases (Score:1)
lie
Re:Cash purchases (Score:1)
Just say NO - Loudly (Score:2)
Re:Cash purchases (Score:1)
Give me your home phone number and street address.
Re:Cash purchases (Score:1)
May I suggest: "Piss off".
Resistance is futile! (Score:5, Funny)
Welcome to the no-privacy age!
Disclaimer: yes, you are correct in questioning my mental sanity. But then again, insanity is just a different view of reality, right?
Re:Resistance is futile! (Score:1)
Re:Resistance is futile! (Score:2, Funny)
I think we've seen that before!
Tin Foil Hat (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Tin Foil Hat (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Wha?!? (Score:1)
Re:Tin Foil Hat (Score:1)
What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:5, Insightful)
From the Privacy Resolutions:
I can understand why people want anti-spyware when running on windows boxes, since they also do a good job with cleaning recent files and such.
I can also understand why people would want firewalls for privacy. They're more convenient than actually locking down all ports and services manually
But anti-virus? And as a privacy measure? I don't get this. I have run without anti-virus for almost seven years, on various Windows boxes. I have never been virus-infected.
Whenever I am called out to do virus disaster recovery, it's almost always for people who have an antivirus solution installed. When are people going to drink the kool-aid, and understand that anti-virus solutions don't help.
My advice would rather go something like this: Set up your mail client so it won't auto-infect you by receiving mail. Don't open attachments. Don't install warez. Don't be so freakin' naive and gullible. Stop believing strangers send you naked Britneys.
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:3, Insightful)
Ok, let me explain this once more: Anti-virus software will not help you. What will help you is having habits that prevent infection.
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:1)
I think what you should be saying is that anti-Virus software may help you, but is not a magic bullet in isolation from having good habits.
Multiple layers of defence (of which AV software is one layer) is a good security principle.
Furthermore, you claim that you have "never been infected". In the absence of virus scanning tools, how are you reasonably certain of this?
To summarily write-off all anti-virus software, especially on Windows is naive.
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
On a related note: I am also on
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
However, save for using scanning tools "once or twice" you cannot be certain that something hasn't slipped through which may not have required an action on your part to infect the system, e.g. via a flaw in your browser or email client.
The infection may have happened prior to Microsoft or the vendor releasing a patch and the patch may not have removed an infection once in place.
As such, regular scanning would still be a good thing.
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:1)
Safe computing practices are a far more effective virus prevention tactic than blind reliance on a outdated software.
The only times I've been infected is when I do something stupid, like if I click on an attachment accidentally. THEN I install an up to date virus scanner, remove the virus and uninstall it again so it doesn't hog resources. Usually by that time I'm due for an f-d
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
Dear Sir. Your answer is probably well meant, but I fear this is your ignorance speaking.
An anti-virus solution does not prevent virus infection. By nature, anti-virus vendors will always provide protection "after the fact". They can not provide protection against viruses they
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:1)
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
I don't ever plan on being in an automobile accident. I drive cautiously,
am alert for other drivers, and don't engage in risky behavior behind the
wheel. Although I drive older vehicles, I take pride in basic maintainance
and make sure that the brake system and tires are in excellent shape.
I still wear my seatbelt. Its not guarenteed to protect me in an
accident. Heck, in a small percentage of automobile accidents, it probably
results in more severe
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:3, Interesting)
This is all fine and good if you do not receive much mail, but when you receive hundreds daily, it is nice to have most of it vetted so you do not have to be uber-cautious all the time. Without AV and AS software, I'd spend hours instead of minutes per da
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:2)
Unfortunately, even legitimate, legal software sometimes comes loaded w/ spyware.
My father installed Broderbund's "Family Tree Maker" and it installed an app which AdAware determined was spyware (IIRC, the binary was "ddagent.exe"). It runs as a daemon. I looked up the app once and it's supposed to send the family tree data you've inputted back to Broderbund so that they can build a big, interconnected family tree of all their software's users.
It's relatively harmless, really, but
Re:What does antivirus have to do with privacy? (Score:1)
I have run without anti-virus for almost seven years, on various Windows boxes. I have never been virus-infected.
How, exactly, do you know you've never been infected, if you don't use any anti-virus tools to validate that fact for you?
Some More... (Score:3, Insightful)
Don't ever click the unsubscribe links from those annoying emails.
Read all your mails in text based mail client (MUA) to get rid of those bugs crafted in HTML code to trace your activity.
Re:Some More... (Score:2)
Re:Some More... (Score:2)
Re:Some More... (Score:1)
Choose your friends. Choose life...
No more credit card offers! (Score:5, Informative)
I called up the phone number in step 5 and was notified of a web site that would remove credit card offers and insurance offers for 5 years or permanently!
Guess what I signed up for?
https://www.optoutprescreen.com/
So sweet. Less junk mail is a good thing.
Re:No more credit card offers! (Score:2)
Opting out of pre-approved credit offers is not much, but it can be useful (and save you a lot of annoyance).
Re:No more credit card offers! (Score:2)
In addition, I refuse to provide my SSN to any website. Period. Even if they can reduce my junk mail. If you are running a legit business, give me a physical mailing address that I can verify. I will send you my information, certified mail with return receipt.
I thought this was a thread about privacy.
Re:No more credit card offers! Know Why? (Score:2)
Dweeb. The way THAT works is they report you as a deadbeat, your score goes to 300, and NO ONE will give you credit. Hope you aren't buying a house or car soon . .
Given that life on this planet is only temporary in the first place, the concept of "credit" (as it refers to economic prowess and compensatory dick size comparisons) is mostly irrelevant and superficial.
It's always cool to have the latest expensive toys and live in peer-approved neighbourhoods and drive the trendy cars, but if those are yo
Number 11... (Score:5, Funny)
/.ed site. here is the text (Score:3, Informative)
1. Engage in "privacy self defense." Don't share any personal information with businesses unless it is absolutely necessary (for delivery of an item, etc.). Don't give your phone number, address, or name to retail stores. If you do, they can sell that information or use it for telemarketing and junk mail. If they ask for your information, say "it's none of your business," or give "John Doe, 555-1212, 123 Main St." Don't return product warranty cards. Don't complete consumer surveys even if they appear to be anonymous. Profilers can build in barely-perceptible codes that link you to the survey, and this data goes straight to direct marketers.
2. Pay with cash where possible. Electronic transactions leave a detailed dossier of your activities that can be accessed by the government or sold to telemarketers. Paying with cash is one of the best ways to protect privacy and stay out of debt.
3. Install anti-spyware, anti-virus, and firewall software on your computer. If your computer is connected to the Internet, it is a target of malicious viruses and spyware. There are free spyware-scanning utilities available online, and anti-virus software is probably a necessary investment if you own a Windows-based PC. Firewalls keep unwanted people out of your computer and detect when malicious software on your own machine tries to communicate with others.
4. Use a temporary rather than a permanent change of address. If you move in 2005, be sure to forward your mail by using a temporary change of address order rather than a permanent one. The junk mailers have access to the permanent change of address database; they use it to update their lists. By using the temporary change of address, you'll avoid unwanted junk mail.
5. Opt out of prescreened offers of credit. By calling 1-888-567-8688, you can stop receiving those annoying letters for credit and insurance offers. This is an important step for protecting your privacy, because those offers can be intercepted by identity thieves.
6. Choose Supermarkets that Don't Use Loyalty Cards. Be loyal to supermarkets that offer discounts without requiring enrollment in a loyalty club. If you have to use a supermarket shopping card, be sure to exchange it with your friends or with strangers.
7. Opt out of financial, insurance, and brokerage information sharing. Be sure to call all of your banks, insurance companies, and brokerage companies and ask to opt out of having your financial information shared. This will cut down on the telemarketing and junk mail that you receive.
8. Request a free copy of your credit report by visiting http://www.annualcreditreport.com. All Americans are now entitled to a free credit report from each of the three nationwide credit reporting agencies, Experian, Equifax, and Trans Union. You can engage in a free form of credit monitoring by requesting one of your three reports every four months. By staggering your request, you can check for errors regularly and identify potential problems in your credit report before you lose out on a loan or home purchase. Currently, these reports are available to residents of most western states. By September 2005, all Americans will have free access to their credit report.
9. Enroll all of your phone numbers in the Federal Trade Commission's Do-Not-Call Registry. The Do-Not-Call Registry (http://www.donotcall.gov or 1-888-382-1222) offers a quick and effective shield against unwanted telemarketing. Be sure to enroll the numbers for your wireless phones, too.
10. File a complaint. If you believe a company has violated your privacy, contact the Federal Trade Commission, your state Attorney General, and the Better Business Bureau. Successful investigations improve privacy protections for all consumers.
Disposable identities (Score:5, Informative)
Or... Give them disposable information that allows you to cease hearing from them, or know when/if they have distributed your information without consent.
To this end, I highly recommend Spam Gourmet [spamgourmet.com] which allows the on-the-fly creation of disposable email addresses.
If you walk into McDonalds and really want to sign up for their win a free cheeseburger contest, you give them an email address like cheesy.n.youraccount@spamgourmet.com and you will only ever receive 'n' emails to that address before it dies.
Of course if you then receive emails from Pizza Hut, you know exactly where they got the email from.
If you never want to hear from the person, give them this address: me@privacy.net.
Any emails sent to that address receive a reply to the effect of: "whoever gave you this address didn't want you to have theirs".
Useful stuff!
Re:Disposable identities (Score:1)
I'm serious! I don't know those guys, so how can I trust them? It could be a trapped honeyjar
Anyone have insight?
Re:Disposable identities (Score:1)
As your address, just give them another Spam Gourmet address. :)
Seriously though, I agree with you that caution is warranted. To that end, I'd use a free account (e.g. from yahoo) solely for this purpose.
Re:Disposable identities (Score:2)
Like anything else, you need to make a calculated risk-assessment.
If in doubt, use a free email account or a real address you can kill one day. Simple!
Admittedly you don't know me, but FWIW, I have had my Spamgourmet service pointed at a seperate address and have NEVER in about 2-3 years received mail directly to it rather than through Spamgourmet (that is, they didn't pass it on).
Re:Disposable identities (Score:1)
Thanks, I think
Re:Disposable identities (Score:2)
That is one of the reasons why I pay for my yahoo e
Re:Disposable identities (Score:2)
I would be careful though of 'catchall' type addresses.
Basically, anything@mydomain.com would get forwarded to me such that I could use addresses like:
pizzahut@mydomain.com
slashdot@mydomain.com etc.
Unfortunately, brute-force spammers start sending to these (aaa@mydomain, aab@mydomain etc.) and every one of these would get to you.
Of course as their are hundreds of the addresses out there, I can't now kill off the catchall feature.
thanks, and questions (Score:2)
That does sound great, and I'll be setting up an account shortly... thanks for the info! A question: wouldn't it be easy for the businesses to program their systems to always change the N (the middle number) to something much higher? Does SpamGourmet allow one to specify a meta-max to prevent such things, or allow one to axe an address spuriously inflated (or even one created blind)?
Re:thanks, and questions (Score:2)
In answer to your question, no.
Once an address is sent to for the first time, THAT becomes the maximum integer and changing it will have no effect as Spamgourmet pays attention only to the first part thereafter.
Moreover, the evil company would unlikely change the number in the address any more than they would change your normal email address as they mus
Re:Disposable identities - SpamMotel.com (Score:2)
A little over-the-top IMHO (Score:2, Insightful)
Now, I've long believed that the best response to some clerk asking for my address on a cash deal is, "why?" or, "I already get your catalogs." I'm already *in their store*, so no further advertising is needed, eh? I wish there was some way for the clerk to get that fact into the store's database.
But there are some things about me that I would dearly love to have marketing folk know and share widely. I'm no
Re:A little over-the-top IMHO (Score:2)
Anyone studying me in detail would see that I tend to actively preserve my unawareness of types of products that I don't use until I decide to use them, then do my own research and usually end up with one that's *not* heavily promoted. I wish some people would dig *that* out of their data mines.
The advertising and marketing industries are mostly innocent scams. Aside from click-thru results to companies' websites (which don't necessarily result in sales and fraud is very easy) there is no way to track p
We Can Take Back Our Privacy! (Score:3, Informative)
The enduring problem is information assymetry--they know how to collect data about you in subtle ways. For instance, just giving a clerk your telephone number enables the company to call Acxiom or Experian and use "enhancement" to get your real name, addresss, and email. If we want to slow this down, we need to become more costive with our data. Merry Xmas, Chris from EPIC.
"Pay with cash where possible" (Score:2)
Re:"Pay with cash where possible" (Score:1)
The price to pay (Score:2)
These guys are pretty bogus (Score:3, Informative)
Despite all their privacy ranting on how the world is trying to guess the size of your penis....
Note the link for http://www.annualcreditreport.com
actually links to:
http://www.epic.org/privacy/fcra/freereportr
That's right... they redirect, and that link only. Hmm... they aren't doing any sort of tracking are they?
Put the tin foil hats back on, and get back in the blast shelter.
I would like to add (Score:2)
You can also ask motor vehicles to not use it nor to distribute your personal information.........they do.....every wonder how those "welcome to the neighborhood" coupon books and sales circulars find you?
Re:I would like to add (Score:2)
You state that as an accepted fact, when until a few years ago, you didn't have to give your SSN to the DMV. But you don't question this at all, which is the "slippery slope" argument in a nutshell. Tell me, what does a driver's license have to do with my earnings history or my (possibly illusory, the way things are going) government pension? Absolutely nothing. Yet the DMV's now require
Re:I would like to add (Score:2)
I agree with you otherwise. I am just informing people what they can/cannot legally do. I have to tell you that it is a blast the first time you refuse to give out your SSN when some authoritative sounding person asks for it.
Peace
Steve
Re:I would like to add (Score:1)
Re:I would like to add (Score:1)
Credit? (Score:2)
As a college student who has yet to take the plunge to get a credit card, I was wondering if someone could clear something up for me. I was under the impression that checking your score too often took points off your rating. Does this new free annual check affect your credit rating in any way whatsoever?
Re:Credit? (Score:2)
Here is some more info [fool.com]
pretty bogus (Score:2)
To protect your privacy, you have to give them your social security number, in addition to your name, address, and date of birth. Oh the irony.
Supermarket discount cards? Huh? (Score:2)
"6. Choose Supermarkets that Don't Use Loyalty Cards. Be loyal to supermarkets that offer discounts without requiring enrollment in a loyalty club. If you have to use a supermarket shopping card, be sure to exchange it with your friends or with strangers."
Huh? This really seems quite trivial. And anyway, if you're so paranoid that you don't want anyone to know what you're buying from the grocery store, you can always:
1) Not use the card when you're buying your monthly supply of liqueur, cigarettes,
Re:Who gives a fucking rat's ass? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Who gives a fucking rat's ass? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Who gives a fucking rat's ass? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Who gives a fucking rat's ass? (Score:5, Insightful)
Dear Sir,
We at Foo Health Insurance have reviewed your personal customer file. It appears you use condoms from the SuperStrong[tm] brand, which is statistically consistent with a promiscuous sex life. Therefore, as a precautionary measure, and to better serve you, we have cross-checked your medical claims file and successfully determined that you have started taking tri-therapies recently. What's more, your credit record seems to indicate that you would be better served by another health insurance company. We therefore regret to inform you that you will no longer be able to enroll in your current plan. Please find enclosed a list of plans you are eligible to.
Regards,
Joe S. Bastard, Foo H.I., Inc.
Re:Who gives a fucking rat's ass? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Who gives a fucking rat's ass? (Score:2, Interesting)
"These days it's all secrecy, and no privacy..."
Mick Jagger wrote that line in a song called Fingerprint file, in 1974.