Mar
25
2009
An anonymous reader writes “A Canadian court has ordered the owners of the FreeDominion.ca to disclose all personal information on eight anonymous posters to the chat site. The required information includes email and IP addresses. The court ruled that anonymous posters have no reasonable expectation of privacy, a major blow to online free speech in Canada.”
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Comments Off on Canadian Court Orders Site To ID Anonymous Posters | tags: email, google, privacy | posted in technical news
Mar
25
2009
Oh my, here we go again. Privacy International (PI) has filed a formal complaint about GoogleGoogle reviewsGoogle reviews’s Street View service to UK’s Information Commissioner (ICO).
Comments Off on Privacy Group Wants To Shut Down Google Street View | tags: google, privacy | posted in technical news
Mar
24
2009
DaGoatSpanka writes with news that Mississippi Governer Haley Barbour signed a bill into law on Friday which instituted a ban on automated cameras that would snap pictures of motorists when they ran red lights. “The new law says the two cities that already have the cameras, Jackson and Columbus, must take them down by Oct. 1. Other cities and counties are banned from starting to use them.” We’ve discussed situations in the past where cities looked at such cameras as “profit centers,” and even tampered with their traffic light timing to catch more motorists. Now, in Mississippi, the contractors who installed the cameras are unhappy, since they received a cut of the ticket revenue generated by the cameras. However, lawmakers overwhelming voted to get rid of them (117-3 in the House, 42-9 in the Senate), because “the cameras were an invasion of privacy and their constituents thought they had been unfairly ticketed.”
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Comments Off on Mississippi Passes Law To Ban Traffic Light Cameras | tags: google, news, privacy | posted in technical news
Mar
24
2009
MJackson writes “The Open Rights Group (ORG) has issued a public letter to the Chief Privacy Officers (or the nearest equivalent) for seven of the world’s largest website giants (including Microsoft and Google), asking them to boycott Phorm. The controversial Phorm system works with broadband ISPs to monitor what websites you visit for use in targeted advertising campaigns. Meanwhile, the Joseph Rowntree Reform Trust has issued a new report slamming the UK government’s plans for a Communications Database. This would be designed to intercept and log every UK ISP user’s e-mail headers, website accesses and telephone history. The report warns that the public are often, ‘neither served nor protected by the increasingly complex and intrusive holdings of personal information invading every aspect of our lives.'”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Rights Groups Speak Out Against Phorm, UK Comm. Database | tags: database, google, microsoft, Phone, privacy, web | posted in technical news
Mar
22
2009
Security and privacy are some of the major concerns these days while choosing a web browser to use. So much so that all the major players in the “browser wars” are providing or developing a private browsing mode.
Comments Off on 10 Best Firefox Addons for Security and Privacy | tags: privacy, security, web | posted in technical news
Mar
21
2009
Earlier this evening we came across a privacy flaw on Facebook that allowed users to gain access to portions of their friends’ profiles that they should not have been able to see…
Comments Off on Facebook bug reveals private photos, wall posts | tags: facebook, privacy | posted in technical news
Mar
20
2009
mask.of.sanity writes “Australia’s secretive Internet filter blacklist held by its communications watchdog has been leaked, revealing the government has understated the amount of banned Web pages by more than 1000. Multiple legitimate businesses and Web sites have been banned including two bus companies, online poker sites, multiple Wikipedia entries, Google and Yahoo group pages, a dental surgery and a tour operator. Betfair, a billion-dollar business blocked by the blacklist, CEO Andrew Twaits was furious the government has potentially annexed tens of millions of dollars in revenue after its Betfair.com gambling site was blacklisted. The blacklists were reportedly leaked by a Web filter operator to wikileaks which has published the full list of banned URLs. Outraged privacy advocates say the government has effectively lied about the amount of URLs included in the blacklists, totalling more than 2300, and the type of content which it would ban. The leak follows a series attacks on the watchdog in which irate users successfully lobbied for web sites to be banned, only to be threatened with an ,000 fine for publishing the link contained in the PR response. It was also revealed the watchdog can ban Web sites at a whim, with no accountability.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Australia’s Vast, Scattershot Censorship Blacklist Revealed | tags: google, privacy, web, wikipedia | posted in technical news
Mar
19
2009
CWmike writes “Internet Explorer 8 has shipped in its final version and is ready to take on its rivals. Preston Gralla reviewed it and says the latest version of Microsoft’s browser leapfrogs its closest competition, Firefox 3, for basic browsing and productivity features — it has better tab handling, a niftier search bar, a more useful address bar, and new tools that deliver information directly from other Web pages and services. IE8 has also been tweaked for security and includes a so-called ‘porn mode,’ new anti-malware protection, and better ways to protect your privacy. The most noticeable new features? Accelerators and Web Slices. Think of an Accelerator as a mini-mashup that delivers information from another Web site directly to your current browser page. Web Slices deliver changing information from a Web page you’re not actively visiting directly to IE8. There’s one big problem for many, though. No add-ins, and there doesn’t appear to be such an ecosystem on the horizon. So if you’re a fan of add-ins and customizing the browser itself, writes Gralla, Firefox is superior. But for the actual browsing experience, IE8 has the upper hand — for now.”
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on Look Out, Firefox 3 — IE8 Is Back On Top For Now | tags: google, malware, microsoft, privacy, security, web | posted in technical news
Mar
18
2009
snydeq writes “The Electronic Privacy Information Center filed a 15-page complaint asking the FTC to force Google to stop offering online services that collect data until the presence of adequate privacy safeguards is verified. The EPIC also wants Google to disclose all data loss or breach incidents, citing several incidents where data held by Google was at risk, the most recent of which occurred earlier this month with its Google Docs. The EPIC complaint [PDF] also listed other security flaws in Gmail and Google Desktop, a desktop indexing program, and urged Google to donate million to a public fund that will support research into technologies such as encryption, data anonymization and mobile location privacy.” EPIC has raised privacy concerns about Google before, and about Windows XP as well.
Read more of this story at Slashdot.
Comments Off on EPIC Urges FTC To Investigate Google Services | tags: desktop, encryption, gmail, google, mobile, privacy, program, security, windows xp | posted in technical news
Mar
17
2009
The EFF has released a beta version of a new search tool that lets you mine the documents the EFF has unearthed using FOIA requests and lawsuits over the years. Quoting: “In celebration of Sunshine Week, the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) today launched a sophisticated search tool that allows the public to closely examine thousands of pages of documents the organization has pried loose from secretive government agencies. The documents relate to a wide range of cutting-edge technology issues and government policies that affect civil liberties and personal privacy.” I tried a search for “border” among the documents relating to the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement and turned up 21 results and fascinating reading.
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Comments Off on EFF Unveils Search Tool for FOIA Results | tags: google, privacy, technology | posted in technical news