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#12 | ||||||
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Tiny Dick Ultimate User
Join Date: Mar 2010
Location: Near Peace River, AB
Posts: 560
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I posted a few things so far. Hopefully, they might help some people. But at the same time, I realize most people don't really know how it works and what can happen. While I won't pretend to know it all, after 25 years earning a living in the computer technology industry I sure learned a few basic things/facts and I'd like to share some of them. Disclaimer: This is a long post. I can only hope the system can take it. And if you don't care about your privacy, don't bother reading it. First and foremost, there are no possibilities of real PRIVACY on the net. Face it. I'm sorry to blow that whistle on you if you weren't aware of it, but that's how it is... But don't get paranoid either. Not everyone is after you personally. Yet, in a somewhat impersonal way, well, they are pretty much all after you... Why is there no privacy possible on the net? For a very simple reason that I mentioned in a previous post: Quote:
And if you move/change phone number, you need to advise them. - Reality check: While these (phone number/address) may seem somewhat private to you (hey, they do refer directly to you, and you only give them to whom you want to right?) these are actually stored in databases with pretty much all the organizations you deal with and also in the rather easy to access phone book, be it printed or on the net (just try searching your name/phone number/address on the net. You'll be amazed at what you can find that is publicly available. Hell, you'll even find a view of your house on Google Street. But be aware your searches will be indexed and stored somewhere.). - End of Reality check So, as I said earlier, face it. There is no real world privacy as you need to divulge contact information at least to some people/organizations. I mean, to be totally anonymous in the real world, you'd have no phone, no address, no bills, not even a birth record. In such a case, you would not exist and you sure would not be reading this. ![]() Now, there is a very subtle difference between the real world and the virtual world of the net. Even if you were homeless, had no phone or anything else traceable in the real world, the very second you'd connect to the virtual world, with whatever device you want, you'd get assigned an address (called an IP address). You don't even have a choice. That is how it works, pretty much as turning a light on by flipping the switch or starting your car by putting the key in the ignition and turning it. You do it, it happens. Period. Simple enough I hope. So here you are with that nifty so called virtual IP address that allows you to communicate with the rest of the virtual world. And that IP address gets logged pretty much everywhere you'll go on that beautiful virtual world. Herein lies the lack of anonymity that most people might think they have. IP addresses have been logged on servers since the very beginning of the internet, even before it became mainstream in the early 1990's. A little sidetrack... Quote:
Yet, that been said, whatever IP you get does gets logged everywhere you go. And that is only the beginning... More and more organizations try (and succeed) to track IP addresses movements on the net. Quote:
communication technologies. Another popular quote from an American series also apply here: "Trust no one". And the "one" here is not so much an individual than a corporation. Here is an outstanding example: Mark Zuckerberg, the creator of Facebook: Facebook's Zuckerberg Says The Age of Privacy is Over At least he is being up front about this, contrarily to most other sites. Yet, that does not mean he is right or that I agree with him. Just check these: facebook privacy issues - Google Search That might open your eyes on a certain number of things. My pet peeve is that all these nifty corporations (insert whatever names you feel like here) are actually gathering data about us in all manner they can and they are using this data for their own profit while we, end users of their products, have no say about that. In my mind, this is just plainly morally wrong. Have a look at these: online privacy issues - Google Search You'll find many places you're dealing with in there. And they all do it. Now that I got you paranoid, you're probably going to try to find some smart way to bypass all this. Pretty much like using a PO address instead of your actual mail post address. Quote:
Services like these can be full of deceptions: privacy tools - Google Search And so called anonymizer tools are not reliable. Even The Onion Router (known as TOR) is not perfect: Tor (anonymity network) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Quote:
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