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Privacy

Submission + - The biggest threats to your online privacy (techworld.com)

superapecommando writes:

From Facebook to advertisers who may be putting your online identity up for sale to the highest bidder, and to strangers who could track you across town, new ways of using technology and the Internet are making privacy issues a flash point for controversy.
"Privacy today isn't what it was a year ago," says Jeffrey Chester, director of the Center for Digital Democracy, a nonprofit group that promotes online privacy and free speech. "It wasn't long ago we were worried about advertisers planting cookies on our PC," he says. With today's trends, keeping a handle on your privacy is going to become even harder a year from now, he adds.
What follows are several emerging privacy threats.


Comment Re:Brainstorming? (Score 1) 180

I can see this only really taking off, if they completely open the rest of the code (web front end) so that each company could run their own fully functional wave server. Then you wouldn't have to worry bout Google's privacy (or lack there of) policies. I seem to remember them saying something about this in the kickoff from last year's IO...

Submission + - Whistleblower for IPv4 abusers?

An anonymous reader writes: I used to work for a company called Reynolds & Reynolds as a developer. They have been assigned 168.207.0.0/16 (and many other blocks I'm sure.) Instead of using an RFC1918 private address scheme for the individual desktops on their corporate LAN, they were handing out these public addresses via DHCP and NAT'ing the outbound traffic to a completely different set of IPs. Obviously this is very poor network design and a complete waste of 65k public IP addresses that someone could legitimately be using. With the IPv4 shortage, is there anywhere this abuse should be reported?

Submission + - Newsbin Closed (newzbin.com)

Nyarlthothep writes: Newsbin just got taken down while I was reading it. There is now just a link to another website with gossip about the site's future

Submission + - Apple store refuses payment by cash 1

linuxwrangler writes: Diane Campbell, who is disabled, on a fixed income, and has no credit-cards saved enough to buy an iPad. But when she took her cash to the local Apple store they refused to sell one to her. It turns out that Apple policies prohibit cash purchases of iPads. Even the involvement of the media consumer advocates hasn't swayed Apple.
The Internet

Submission + - The Broadband Net Neutrality Debate Continues (enterprisenetworkingplanet.com)

nj_peeps writes: As the FCC tries to re-classify broadband, and the USF Bill gets debated in the House. Republicans are now seeking to block the FCC from "regulating the internet"

Cliff Stearns (Fla.), the ranking Republican on the Energy and Commerce Committee's Internet subcommittee, introduced a bill on Tuesday that would require the FCC to provide Congress with evidence of a market failure in the Internet service sector before enacting any form of regulations governing how ISPs manage their networks.

"I see no reason for Internet regulation," Stearns said in a statement. "Yet, if there is ever a cause for regulation, it is a decision to be made by Congress — not the FCC."

Hardware

Submission + - Mind-controlled Robotic Arm (cnet.com)

nj_peeps writes: "If you've watched the movie "The Men Who Stare at Goats," you'd know it's all about covert efforts by the military to develop mind control. Well, good luck to them. However, it may be a bit premature to write off mind control as so much paranormal "X-File"-ish diddle-dee-doo, considering that Germany-based Otto Bock HealthCare has just done the seemingly impossible with a mind-controlled robotic arm."

This brings us yet another step closer to the $6 Million Dollar Man, or The Borg depending on your point of view.

NASA

Submission + - Armstrong, Cernan Testify Against Obama Space Plan (look.ac)

MarkWhittington writes: The Senate Commerce Committee held a hearing on the future of American human space flight, specifically examining the Obama space plan rolled out last February. Apollo astronauts Neil Armstrong and Eugene Cernan were among those who provided testimony

The last man to walk on the Moon, Gene Cernan, provided a bombshell.

Gene Cernan, testified that in a teleconference NASA administrator Charles Bolden said that he was so determined that the commercial space initiative in the Obama space plan, which would privatize transport of crew and cargo to and from the International Space Station, that "the failure of the private sector to provide spacecraft in a timely way could result in a bailout equal to that given the auto industry."

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