if you had to rank each of the following in order from greatest to least privacy invasion, how would you rank them? - global eavesdroppers: NSA, etc. - corporate aggregators: Acxiom, ChoicePoint, etc. - social network sites and blogs: MySpace, LiveJournal, etc. NSA is often a villain due to the shear breadth of data they monitor. But corporate privacy invaders can get a level of detail on your person that even Big Brother envies. and just how much personal detail do people willingly broadcast to the world through social networks and online journals (knowingly or unknowingly)? how would you protect your privacy in each of these three contexts?
I'm begining to think that cave living might become popular again! -chris On 11/04/06, coderman <coderman@gmail.com> wrote:
if you had to rank each of the following in order from greatest to least privacy invasion, how would you rank them?
- global eavesdroppers: NSA, etc. - corporate aggregators: Acxiom, ChoicePoint, etc. - social network sites and blogs: MySpace, LiveJournal, etc.
NSA is often a villain due to the shear breadth of data they monitor. But corporate privacy invaders can get a level of detail on your person that even Big Brother envies. and just how much personal detail do people willingly broadcast to the world through social networks and online journals (knowingly or unknowingly)?
how would you protect your privacy in each of these three contexts?
-- -G "The knack of flying is learning how to throw yourself at the ground and miss." "He felt that his whole life was some kind of dream and he sometimes wondered whose it was and whether they were enjoying it." "He inched his way up the corridor as if he would rather be yarding his way down it..." "We demand rigidly defined areas of doubt and uncertainty!" "I love deadlines. I like the whooshing sound they make as they fly by." Famous Quotes written by Douglas Adams, (British comic writer, 1952-2001) http://hitchhikers.movies.go.com/
Thus spake coderman (coderman@gmail.com) [11/04/06 16:24]: : if you had to rank each of the following in order from greatest to : least privacy invasion, how would you rank them? : : - global eavesdroppers: NSA, etc. : - corporate aggregators: Acxiom, ChoicePoint, etc. : - social network sites and blogs: MySpace, LiveJournal, etc. : : NSA is often a villain due to the shear breadth of data they monitor. : But corporate privacy invaders can get a level of detail on your : person that even Big Brother envies. and just how much personal : detail do people willingly broadcast to the world through social : networks and online journals (knowingly or unknowingly)? In terms of privacy invasion, I'd probably have to go in the reverse order you listed. It's relatively easy to avoid content analysis using things like cryptography. That will leaves traffic analysis (who's going where, who's talking to whom) open, but removes some knowledge. ... I had some notes here about how the list includes an organization that performs a certain action (or set thereof), and a source of data. It's a difficult comparison, but it's also been many hours since I started writing this, and the details of my thoughts are nowhere to be found. : how would you protect your privacy in each of these three contexts? Global Eavesdroppers: If I'm doing something that I /really/ don't want $TLA to know about, use some sort of anonymizing, zero-knowledge-ish system. A la Freenet or mixminion. And judicious use of cryptography never hurts. Corporate Aggregators: Just don't fill out personal information anywhere. Or use bogus and contradictory information. Social networks: Same kind of deal: don't use 'em. Or, if for some reason I find myself in a situation where that's not an appealing (or viable) option, don't use real data.
participants (3)
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Chris Olesch
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coderman
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Damian Gerow