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Transportation

Questioning The Privacy Policies Of Data-Collecting Cars (autoblog.com) 85

Remember when Vizio's televisions started collecting data about what shows people were watching? One transportation reporter is more worried about all the data being collected by cars. schwit1 quotes Autoblog: Nowadays, auto manufacturers seem to be tripping over each other pointing out that they offer Apple CarPlay and Google Android Auto. And more recent phenomenon are announcements -- from companies including Ford and Hyundai -- that they are offering Amazon Alexa capabilities. You talk. It listens... Here's the thing. While it may seem appealing to have all manner of connectivity in cars, there is the other side of that. Without getting all tinfoil hat about this, when your TV set is ratting you out, isn't it likely that your car will? It drives. And watches. And listens. And collects data...
That data could be shared with everyone from auto insurers and advertisers to law enforcement officials and divorce attorneys. But the real problem may be consumers assuming strong privacy protections that don't actually exist. The article argues that GM's privacy policy "is like most privacy policies, which boils down to: You use it (the device, software, etc.), you potentially give up a portion of your privacy."

Comment Re:sigh, lamestream press strikes again (Score 2) 213

Point of Sale terminals keep their 3DES encryption keys in firmware within a tamper-resistant module. Even with advanced technology like plasma ablation and electron microscopy, it is believed to be impractical to extract the key. The keys are loaded by a courier who swipes special cards while the device is in maintenance mode. This permits the POS stations to be used over an insecure line to the payment processor, and cleartext is never present anywhere outside the sealed module, from which the key cannot be recovered. So unless you tap the keypad, you cannot have access to the unencrypted PIN. Stealing data is insufficient to obtain the information necessary to use the card. That having been said, if there is any way you can do a trial of a large number of PINs, it is trivial to try all 10,000 possibilities, and see which one works, no matter how strong the encryption is.

Comment Re:Moral Ambiguity (Score 1) 415

At one time, the age of consent was 10. Failure to prosecute something doesn't mean it's "OK", either then, or today. Although Turing's conviction was based on his affair with a 19-year-old, I recall reading that he befriended quite a few working class youth aged 15-17, although it's not well-documented what, if anything, they did in private. Certainly, such behavior would make him the third rail of gay politics if it occurred today. Now I certainly don't think Alan Turing did anything wrong, but my point was that we gloss over things historically, which we would be very unforgiving about in the present time, and perhaps that's a bit hypocritical.

Comment Moral Ambiguity (Score 1) 415

Alan Turing, like Oscar Wilde, had some sexual partners who were working class youth. Back in those days, homosexuality was homosexuality, all homosexuality was illegal, and age wasn't much of an issue. While the Gay Movement celebrates the unjust persecution of Alan Turing for "Homosexuality," they gloss over the fact that today, we would lock him up, throw away the key, and denounce him as a pedophile for consensual sex with teenagers. It's lovely that he's been pardoned, but it's a bit hypocritical how today's Gay Activists grandfather in for Historical Gay Icons, behavior they would be the first to loudly condemn in their contemporaries.

Comment I'm Not Convinced (Score 1) 292

It's not at all clear from the story that JP Morgan's patent copies Bitcoin. The patent says nothing about the transactions being stored to a Distributed P2P Network. Paying bills anonymously with zero transaction fees and competing with Western Union are hardly the areas in which Bitcoin distinguishes itself from other EFT systems.

Comment Seattle Culture (Score 1) 506

There's an old joke about outsiders versus locals in Seattle. "When you move to Seattle, bring your own friends, because you're not going to make any while you're there." While locals don't control Seattle as much as they used to years ago, Seattle employment is a very insular environment dominated by employment agencies.

Comment Warp Drive (Score 2) 181

NASA is currently conducting experiments to see if they can make microscopic warps in space-time sufficient to be detected by an interferometer. What technologies do you see expediting interstellar travel a few centuries from now, and what technologies do you see as being dead ends.

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