Category Archives: Protect Your Computer

Online network education for kids – Doctorow style

Cory Doctorow talks about kids, privacy and social networks

In a recent TEDx presentation, the Canadian blogger and science fiction author, Cory Doctorow, proposes a new type of “network education” for kids online. His views stand in contrast to those suggesting that filtering internet content in an effort to keep kids safe is the way to go. Rather, he argues that filtering content prevents kids from understanding networks and privacy tools on their own – kind of like how feeding ducks in a pond leaves them unprepared to fend for themselves come winter.

Instead, here’s how Doctorow envisions privacy education for kids:

  • Turn to libraries, schools and other institutions to be “islands of networked privacy best practices”
  • Teach kids to encrypt everything they do on the internet
  • Teach them to jailbreak every device that they handle
  • Teach kids to choose the best products for their privacy
  • Teach them to bust every sensor wall that harvests a record of what they look at
  • Teach them to spoof every form they’re asked to fill in
  • Block the RFID tags they carry around with them
  • Figure out how to move through their cities and towns without their locations being recorded by CCTV cameras

Who should be responsible – parents or teachers – for teaching kids about their digital footprints and how should it be done, are important questions. Perhaps, now it’s not a question of who should be responsible but who is willing to take responsibility.

Facebook Now Adding a Secure Connection

Big news in Facebook security settings. And it’s positive!

Last week, Facebook announced they will offer users a more secure connection – encrypted HTTPS protocol instead of HTTP protocol. Similar to the type of secure connection you have when you do online banking, this protocol prevents others from capturing your “cookie” and accessing your account when you use an open wireless network at a coffeeshop, library or other public place. Here’s what it looks like:

It’s a good idea to enable this secure connection – especially if you are using an unsecured wifi network when you log on to Facebook. To select this option, go to “Account Settings”, select “Account Security”, then check the box for “Secure Browsing”. Facebook will be rolling this feature out to all users over the next few weeks. If you don’t see it available now, check back soon.

Zombie Cookies

For the past year, Adobe Flash has been reinstalling cookies that have been deleted by users through its popular viewing application. Known as ‘Zombie Cookies,’ these are secret cookies that, without consent, are re-activated after users have disabled them.

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Cookies are used to track unique web searches and store bits of information that allow websites to personalize viewing data based on the sites a users has visited in the past. Concerned internet users can disable cookies on their computers (though this often affects the ability of sites to operate as intended) and many do. A class action law suit has recently been launched in the Untied States against sites using the application without informing their users of Zombies. Defendants include MTV, ESPN, ABC, NBC and MySpace.

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Visit the Protect module of the Digital Tattoo website to figure out how you can control your cookies and protect yourself.

Scaling the Great Fire Wall one donation at a time

The United States government is set to donate 1.5 million dollars to a Falun Gong affiliated Internet freedom organization, Global Internet Freedom Consortium (CIFG), a recent story on the BBC has claimed. CIFG provides free technologies to people living within Internet repressing states, allowing users to circumnavigate censor code and access outlawed sites.

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China has long been at odds with the Falun Gong religious movement, whose pages are routinely banned in China for ‘seditious’ content, and the report is part of a larger ongoing row between the PRC and idea of a politically free Internet. Google recently pulled out of China due to privacy and hacking concerns after the Peoples Republic of China was accused of infiltrating the search engine to gain access to Human Rights groups working in China. While all governments reserve the right to restrict access to undesirable Internet webpages, few cast the net as widely as the PRC.

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The US ‘donation’ is about as coincidental as drunk driving and a car wreck, and is a not-so-subtle statement about leading global opinion on China’s firewall. The GIFC is a very interesting website with an assortment of resources and articles about Internet freedom groups in states that restrict access to the net. Have a look at the GIFC website and give us your thoughts on the matter.

Work and browse without getting caught

Anyone who has been busted surfing the net at work will surely find some value in this. While we don’t want to encourage any substandard work behavior at DT, a new program, Decreased Productivity, gives browsers the technology to stay one step ahead of an overzealous over-the-shoulder looking employer, and gives us an interesting cultural insight into the information age workplace.

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The concept is simple. The program takes flashy eye catching pages like Facebook, YouTube, and Flickr, strips them of coding, and disguises them as bland early nineties amateur webpages. In theory, when the boss walks by unexpectedly and catches you on a gaming site while stacks of work tower on your desk, you need not worry as your screen and its dubious whereabouts will not catch the managers’ eye. Popular internet icons like the Google header or the Twitter logo are dead give-aways of non-work related browsing, but with the help of a little icon camouflage one can carry on comfortably with their distractions.

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Similar technologies like, Magic Boss Key, which is basically a panic button that hides all info on your desktop (making it irretrievable except to you) and replaces it with ‘work related’ windows, market themselves as privacy wear though no doubt their most popular application is hiding a lackadaisical work ethic.

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While serendipitous and errant browsing has become part of the information age work force, it should not come as a shock as it is simply a new way of doing an old thing. Programs like Decreased Productivity are no different than the advice a co-worker gives on how to pass off water cooler talk as work.