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10 Things I Know to Be True About This Microsoft Hotmail Privacy Case

REMEMBER!
You don’t own your account when you use Hotmail, Outlook, or Gmail, the company does!
That’s why we say “If your not paying for the product YOU are the product”!

It’s ugly. It’s complicated. And it’s a great opportunity for any webmail provider who isn’t Microsoft. When the news broke on Wednesday that Microsoft had tapped into the e-mail of a Hotmail user who had apparently received stolen software from Alex Kibkalo, a rogue Microsoft employee in Lebanon, I didn’t immediately write about it in this space. It’s a complicated matter, and there’s a lot we don’t know about the details — including the identity of the French blogger who allegedly received the purloined code. (There’s a theory on the web about who the person is, but Microsoft’s criminal complaint doesn’t name a name.) Still, in the fullness of time, I have come to a few conclusions…
Read more: http://time.com/34229/microsoft-hotmail-privacy/
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Obama meets with Facebook, Google, Netflix and Dropbox on privacy

Zuckerberg says it seems like it will take a long time for reform to occur!

A week before a self-imposed deadline for a review of National Security Agency programs, President Barack Obama sought Friday to assure leading Internet and tech executives that his administration is committed to protecting people’s privacy.
CEOs from Facebook, Google, Netflix and others spent more than two hours with Obama in the Oval Office discussing their concerns about NSA spying programs, which have drawn outrage from tech companies whose data have been scooped up by the government. Joining Obama and the CEOs were Obama’s commerce secretary, homeland security adviser and counselor John Podesta, whom Obama has tasked with leading a review of privacy and “big data.”
Read more: http://www.pbs.org/newshour/rundown/obama-meets-facebook-google-netflix-dropbox-privacy/
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On Bringing Manners to Markets

Privacy in the physical world has been well understood and fairly non-controversial for thousands of years. We get it, for example, with clothing, doors, curtains and window shades. These each provide privacy by design, because they control visibility and access to our private places and spaces.

The virtual world, however, is very young, dating roughly back to 1995, when the first graphical browsers and ISPs came along. Thus, on the scale of civilization’s evolution, the Net is not only brand new, but in its infancy (the stage in life when it’s okay to go naked and pee and crap all over the place.) On the Net today, manners are almost completely absent. We see this, in a strange and mundane way, in corporate and government obsessions with gathering Big Data from consumers and citizens, mostly without their knowledge or conscious permission.

Companies today are moving budget to the Chief Marketing Officer (a title that didn’t exist a decade ago), so she or he can hire IBM, or SAP or some other BigCo to paint million-point portraits of people, with a palette of pixels harvested by surveillance, all so they can throw better marketing guesswork at them.

This isn’t new in marketing. It’s just an old practice (data-fed junk mail) that has fattened on Big Data and Big Fantasy. As a result we’re all drowning in guesswork, most of which is off the mark, no matter how well-understood we might be by the Big Data mills of the world.

Normally we would look to government to help us comprehend, guide and control infrastructures on which we utterly depend. (e.g. electricity, gas, water, sewage treatment, roads and bridges). But no one entity, including government, can begin to comprehend, much less monitor and regulate, the wild and wooly thing the Net has become (even at its lower layers), especially when so much of what we do with it depends on inside giant black or near-black boxes (Google, Facebook, Twitter, et. al.). But, thanks to Edward Snowden, we now know that the U.S. government itself — via the NSA and who knows what else — is doing the same thing, and also muscling private sector companies to cooperate with them.

But that’s a problem endemic to what Gore Vidal called the “national security state”, and plain old market forces won’t have much influence on it. Democratic and political ones will, but they’re not on the table here.

At Customer Commons, our table is the marketplace, and our role in it as customers. Whatever else we do, it can’t hurt to recognize and expose practices that are just plain rude.

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Microsoft Software Leak Inquiry Raises Privacy Issues

Microsoft says they won’t read your Private emails sent through their Hotmail service, but they can and they will!  Read this disturbing article below.

Technology companies have spent months denying they know anything about broad government spying on people who use their Internet services.  But a legal case filed this week against a former Microsoft employee shows the power these companies themselves have to snoop on their customers whenever they want to.
Read more: http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/21/technology/microsofts-software-leak-case-raises-privacy-issues.html?_r=0
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Is your boss spying on you? Your employer could be using a host of new technologies to snoop on you like never before

There have always been bad bosses. Bad bosses with excessive amounts of your Personal Data would be even worse!
Shouldn’t employers and employees treat each other with mutual respect?

About 12 years ago, I worked in a large office in Camden Town. It wasn’t a particularly easy time in my life, and, for various reasons, I found myself spending much of the working day firing off angry personal emails and scouring the web – until one day when I arrived at work to discover that my internet access had been suspended.
Read more: http://www.belfasttelegraph.co.uk/life/technology-gadgets/is-your-boss-spying-on-you-your-employer-could-be-using-a-host-of-new-technologies-to-snoop-on-you-like-never-before-30109772.html
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Cybercriminals use fake Malaysia flight MH370 websites to steal personal data

Cybercriminals will stop at nothing to steal your Personal Data!

Cybercriminals are exploiting the disappearance of a Malaysia Airlines plane by luring users to websites purporting to offer the latest news in order to steal their personal information, an Internet security firm warned Tuesday.
Trend Micro urged Internet users to exercise caution when clicking on links shared on social media for news of flight MH370, which mysteriously vanished from the radar in the early hours of March 8 while on its way from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing.  There is no trace of the aircraft or the 239 people on board…
Read more: http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/03/18/cybercriminals-use-fake-malaysia-flight-mh370-websites-to-steal-personal-data/
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The Comprehensive Guide to Facebook Privacy Settings

A useful guide to managing your Facebook Privacy settings.
A few minutes spent here can lead to a happier (online) life!

The first thing you have to realize about Facebook: Nothing you put there is truly private. Yes, you can control how users see or don’t see your profile. But every time you like a product or even look at a page, the company itself is taking note. This doesn’t mean that some day Facebook will malevolently release your every click to the world. But it does mean that Facebook is not your private diary, and what you do on the website gets collected and cataloged. That’s worth keeping in mind whenever you use the service.
Read more: http://time.com/25448/the-comprehensive-guide-to-facebook-privacy-settings/
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Public apathy over GCHQ snooping is a recipe for disaster

A “must read” article about why people should care more about government Internet surveillance.
The lack of public alarm at government internet surveillance is frightening, but perhaps it’s because the problem is difficult to convey in everyday terms

As someone who is supposed to know about these things, I’m sometimes asked to give talks about computing to non-technical audiences. The one thing I have learned from doing this is that if you want people to understand technological ideas then you have to speak to them in terms that resonate with their experience of everyday things.
Read more: http://www.theguardian.com/technology/2014/mar/16/apathy-gchq-snooping-internet-surveillance
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Imagine if Companies Had to Ask Before Using Your Data

Europe leads the way towards giving people the right to control their Personal Data.

If you’re worried about Internet companies using-and-abusing your data, you might want to consider moving to Europe, where privacy legislation is much further along than in the United States.
On Wednesday the European Parliament voted to approve legislation that would give people greater control over their personal information. Europe’s privacy measure is a work in progress. It cannot become law until it has the approval of national governments, including those of Germany and Britain, which have been reluctant to take up the rules because they fear its impact on businesses. But the Parliament’s vote is still important because it sets a high standard against which other proposals can be judged.
Read more: http://takingnote.blogs.nytimes.com/2014/03/13/imagine-if-companies-had-to-ask-before-using-your-data/
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Surveillance, Snowden dominated discussions at a more serious South by Southwest

Controlling your Personal Data takes center stage at the iconic South by Southwest festival!

Former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden’s surveillance revelations took center stage at this year’s South By Southwest Interactive, a five-day tech-focused festival best known for helping Twitter and Foursquare burst into the mainstream. Snowden didn’t have any new bombs to drop, but spoke to the South By audience because the festival foregoes major product launches in favor of taking the temperature of tech. This year, the industry is boiling.
The developers, startups, marketers, CEOs, and media types who attend SXSW share the same suspicions about surveillance and concerns about online privacy that average folks feel, but unlike you and I, creators of apps and services have the power to ease those fears.
Read more: http://www.techhive.com/article/2107480/surveillance-snowden-dominated-discussions-at-a-more-serious-south-by-southwest.html
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