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Google might be a Big Brother
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,65397,00.html
Google Might Be a Big Brother Wired News Report Page 1 of 1 09:30 AM Oct. 19, 2004 PT People who use public or workplace computers for e-mail, instant messaging and web searching have a new privacy risk to worry about: Google's free tool that indexes a PC's contents for quickly locating data. If the new Google (GOOG) tool is installed on computers at libraries and internet cafes, users could unwittingly allow people who follow them on the PCs, for example, to see sensitive information in e-mails they've exchanged. That could mean revealed passwords, exposed conversations with doctors or viewed web pages detailing online purchases. Google Desktop Search, publicly released in a beta test phase for computers running the latest Windows operating systems, automatically records e-mail you read through Outlook, Outlook Express or the Internet Explorer browser. It also saves copies of web pages you view through IE and chat conversations using America Online instant-messaging software. And it finds Word, Excel and PowerPoint files stored on the computer. |
Excel files?
Not that good news at all. Cant we keep anything to ourself Feynman? How do you hide your excel data? Password all files? The other day I was worried about my firewall.. having a dummy spit here, need saving. Fast! |
PGP has been my mainstay since around 1994. When PGPDisk came out, I started using it. Before that, I used Win16 ScramDisk. Both create virtual partitions.
But when the partitions are open, you are in trouble anyway. I migrated to Firefox. I use an e-mail program that is virtually unknown (but I might migrate to Pegasus soon) Never go "mono-culture" for your software, otherwise, you're vulnerable to plagues... |
Quote:
I know this might sound really dumb, but I spent a few seconds thinking what about if I changed my font to wing-ding.. cause I don't think anyone can read that.. *chuckle* :p Okay serious now.. I shall start thinking about that program Pretty Good Privacy. Before I do download, is this the url.. pgpi.org/products/pgp/versions/freeware/ ? Thanks Feynman. |
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Yeah, but the freeware versions do not have PGP Disk in them. They're only for encrypting individual files.
To understand how it works, the basics, I STRONGLY recommend you download V2.6.3i at http://www.pgpi.org/products/pgp/versions/freeware/dos/ and that you read the tutorials. Skip everything that pertains to program usage, the command line interface commands and switches, etc but read the broad principles and explanations of how the program works. The help files of hte new programs are aiming at functionality, but this is TREACHEROUS for it can lead you to use the program in an unsafe manner. Their interface is designed to be as dumb-proof as possible, but still, you can make major mistakes. SECURITY IS NOT THE USAGE OF A TOOL IT IS A SET OF STRICTLY ADHEREDED-TO PROCEDURES ! If you don't adhere strictly to procedures, you will put yourself to more risk than if you do not use encryption, for you will fall victim to a false sense of security If you don't understand exactly how and why PGP works, DO NOT USE IT. That way, you won't commit to computer things that you do not want other people to know. Only V8 runs on XP, and there is no free PGP Disk. I have a paid copy of V7 with PGP Disk and that's why I'm sticking to W2K. There is a hack on V6 to have PGPDisk work on the freeware version, and I think it's available on PGPI.org site. The difference between the US and international version has to do with patents, but most of them are expired or about to expire in the US anyway. The international version is reputed to be superior. You can download the full source code to these programs, inspect the code for backdoors and compile them yourself if you're really of a suspicious nature... You should never ever trust any encryption program for which the full source code is not published. The secret shall never be in the code but rather in the mathematics of the algorithm. The last version of PGP does not have it's full source code published, AFAIK (things might have changed though). The company changed hands several times. The original software was published as GNU Public Licence Freeware. There is a long (10 years) story of that software. A new version of the freeware, PGP compatible is being written: GPG. Last time I checked, it was still at the Linux-developper's level. Eventually, a full freeware, peer reviewed, will emerge from that but it will take some time (years). |
they better not be on computers i visit when i'm on vacation
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thx good to know.
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