dontmineonme

dontmineonme

Don't Mine on Me is an advocacy group for individuals' right to privacy. Based on the rallying cry for the American independence, "Don't Tread On Me," our name and mission fight against the surveillance and mining of individual data without proper consent and dignity.

72% of Americans Refuse Google Glass Over Privacy Concerns: Report

72% of Americans are concerned about their Privacy and the Privacy of others while using Google Glass!  How do you feel about Google Glass?

The main reason why Americans won’t wear Google Glass isn’t its high price or the less-than-stellar reputation of some of its users — it’s privacy.
A recent poll, conducted by market-research firm Toluna, found 72% of Americans cited privacy concerns as the biggest reason for not wanting to wear Glass.
Read more: http://mashable.com/2014/04/07/google-glass-privacy/
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avelin outclasses Chrome with one-handed gestures, ad blocking, built-in VPN

The NEW Javelin browser pack a slew of features you rarely see on a mobile browser.
It’s just a download away!

Right now, if you aren’t using your Android phone’s built-in Web browser, then you’re probably using Chrome, but there are a number of popular browser alternatives out there, and one of our new favorites is Javelin. It’s one of the first browsers built around the idea that we’re using it on a mobile phone, not a desktop.
Javelin packs a slew of features you rarely see on mobile browsers, especially Chrome and the Android browser. These features include one-handed gestures, a special viewing mode, a built-in VPN, its own incognito mode (Chrome does have this), and even an ad-blocker. This all revolves around a very straightforward, simple UI featuring a bit of Holo-style color and flair.
Read more: http://www.digitaltrends.com/mobile/javelin-android-browser-review/#ixzz2y82OZXYV
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Microsoft to start blocking annoying adware by default

Microsoft is empowering users to control their own experience by blocking annoying adware by default!

Microsoft has toughened its criteria for classifying programs as adware and gave developers three months to conform with the new principles or risk having their programs blocked by the company’s security products.
The most important change in Microsoft’s policy is that adware programs will be blocked by default starting July 1. In the past such programs were allowed to run until users chose one of the recommended actions offered by the company’s security software.
Read more: http://www.pcworld.com/article/2140240/microsoft-to-start-blocking-adware-that-lacks-easy-uninstall.html
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What’s the Deal With Facebook’s Privacy Dinosaur?

Keep an eye out for Facebook’s Privacy dinosaur – it just might keep you from over sharing!

If you’ve posted to Facebook recently, you may have noticed a new graphic with a prehistoric twist: the privacy dinosaur.
The company is testing a pop-up reminder that encourages users to pay attention to who they’re sharing with on its platform, and the privacy dinosaur — a blue laptop-wielding cartoon dinosaur — accompanies the message.
Read more: http://mashable.com/2014/04/01/facebook-privacy-dinosaur/
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http://www.wired.com/2014/03/privacy-is-dead/

Don’t believe the hype. Privacy is not Dead!

Look at the behavior of teenagers, supposedly the ones among us who care least about privacy. Microsoft researcher Danah Boyd has investigated how they use social media; it turns out that teens are both very public and very private, often at the same time. In a behavior called whitewalling, users post to Facebook—sometimes in great detail — but then quickly delete everything, creating a blank timeline. That’s a new form of privacy for the social media age: a mass release of information that eventually disappears. Boyd also describes “social steganography,” in which teens use things like slang, inside jokes, and song lyrics to hide private messages in plain sight; one audience understands the meaning of a post while others (adults or more distant friends) scroll right by.
Read more: http://www.wired.com/2014/03/privacy-is-dead/
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In new social networks, anonymity is all the rage

Anonymity is nice but…”Beware of the Dark Side!”

When mobile social app Yik Yak swept into Auburn University, some of the coolest kids were quick to start posting on it.
But no one knows who is saying what because the comments are anonymous.
“It spread pretty fast,” says Nickolaus Hines, a junior at the school in the US state of Alabama.
“The majority of things are jokes or things which are obviously funny,” said the 21-year-old. But “some … are pretty mean.”
Yik Yak, which allows smartphone users to see posts in a radius up to five miles (eight kilometers), is part of a flurry of new apps that offer novel ways to interact on social networks without revealing one’s identity.
Read more: http://www.bangkokpost.com/tech/computer/402517/
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Microsoft will stop snooping through Hotmail to investigate security leaks

After getting caught reading customers’ email, Microsoft says it will use legal channels in the future.

Microsoft has scrapped a policy which allowed it to peek at Hotmail messages to plug leaks or investigate intellectual property theft.
The change came after news broke last week that the U.S. technology titan peered into the account of a French blogger who had gotten hold of inside information about Windows software in 2012.
While the tactic seemed unsavory, it was deemed legal because Microsoft terms of service grant permission for the company to access or disclose information about a user to protect its “rights or property.”
Read more: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/03/28/microsoft-will-stop-snooping-through-hotmail-to-investigate-security-leaks/
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Big Data Summit 2014: Youth social media oversharing “a real challenge” for workplace data privacy

The dangers of social media sharing in the workplace!

A young generation brought up with no qualms about sharing absolutely everything on Facebook is presenting a real challenge to data privacy policies in the workplace, says solicitor Robert Bond, head of data protection and information security at law firm Speechly Bircham.
Bond expressed his concerns while speaking as part of a panel discussion about managing privacy and ethics in an age of big data atComputing’s Big Data Summit 2014. He used the example of a teenage girl’s blasé attitude to sharing confidential information which almost ended in disaster while on work placement at the law firm.
Read more: http://www.computing.co.uk/ctg/news/2336739/big-data-summit-2014-youth-social-media-oversharing-a-real-challenge-for-workplace-data-privacy
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‘Big six’ energy firms face competition inquiry

An investigation is the only way to restore full public confidence to the energy sector and depoliticize the whole issue!

Regulators will investigate whether the “big six” UK energy suppliers prevent effective competition in the UK energy market.
A report by regulator Ofgem has called for an investigation by the Competition and Markets Authority (CMA) which could take 18 months.
Centrica boss Sam Laidlaw said it would cause delays to investment and “an increasing risk” of blackouts.
The BBC’s Industry Correspondent John Moylan said the report also cited low levels of switching by consumers and the fact that the market shares of the big six suppliers had not changed significantly over time.
Richard Lloyd, executive director of the consumer group which, said the regulator’s report was effectively admitting that it had not done enough to regulate the market.
Read more: http://www.bbc.com/news/business-26734203

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These are the cutest surveillance cameras that will ever spy on you

A Wolf in Sheep’s clothing!
Would you be happier being spied on by these “cute” surveillance cameras?


Surveillance cameras often look sinister as they invade your privacy, but the Italian design firm Parsons created the Animals series to lighten the mood by turning them into cute creatures. The firm worked with product designer Eleanor Trevisanutto to make sand-cast aluminum covers in the shapes of animals like a squirrel, a grasshopper, and a bird to enclose all the working parts of a surveillance camera. They look like things you’d see hanging on the corner of an elementary school building or looking over a zoo, and the thought of seeing a colorful, metallic animal watching you is both charming and ridiculous. Surveillance cameras will always be tools for hidden monitoring, but the Animals’ misshapen, geometric design language makes these cameras abstract, recognizable, and less intimidating than most.
Read more: http://www.theverge.com/2014/3/26/5549680/eleanor-trevisanutto-parsons-animals-surveillance-camera-series
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