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NHS England database raises privacy concerns

There will be no way for patients to know who has accessed their medical records!

Privacy groups have raised concerns about NHS England’s plans to create a single database of medical data collected from hospitals and general practitioners.
They warn there will be no way for patients to work out who has accessed their medical records or how they are using the information, reports the Guardian.
Read more: http://www.computerweekly.com/news/2240212767/NHS-England-database-raises-privacy-concerns
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Marketing isn’t getting the market’s message

eMarketer — always a source of great statistics — buries its lead in Discounts Drive Some US Consumers to Disregard Privacy Concerns. Same goes for the subhead, which reads “41% are willing to let marketers use personal data for discounts.”

Those are minority glosses on a majority fact: 59% aren’t willing to let marketers use personal data for discounts — and much higher percentages go out of their way to avoid what marketing does constantly, which is snarf up personal data. Here’s eMarketer’s graphic from the same piece:

emarketer stats

And, as we see, the numbers are going up. Also, if you go back to the source (TRUSTe) at the bottom of that graphic, you’ll find this and this, as well as the 2013 Consumer Data Privacy Report, all of which tell the same story: most consumers don’t like giving up data or privacy.

Getting that report, by the way, requires filling out a form and yielding a pile of personal data (so a salesperson can call and pitch you something); but if you don’t want to do that, here are the two stats they use to tempt the reader:

  • 35% of consumers stopped doing business due to privacy concerns
  • Only 1 in 4 are willing to share data for free services

And this graphic from the summary page could hardly be clearer about where the market stands in respect to privacy and trade-offs:

tradeoffs

Earth to Marketers: This is the market speaking to you. It’s saying the personalized advertising glass is more than 3/4ths empty. Calling it any % full is delusional.

The thing is, you can’t solve this yourselves. The solutions you need are ones that come from us: the customers of your advertisers. Not from you. We don’t care how hard you work to “deliver a better advertising experience.” You’ve poisoned the advertising well already. Olive branches like the ad choices icon are too little and too late.

But don’t worry. We’ll still buy stuff. We’ll still want good economic signaling from companies. But we’re done with all the agency living on your side of the demand/supply divide. What we both need is better signaling from us to you — in our ways and on our terms. Stay tuned for those.

Meanwhile, fellow customers, protect your Chrome browser from snoopy marketers with our Web Pal. You can download it here.

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Encrypted Blackphone goes to war with snoopers

Out of the box, this phone does a lot of things to protect your Privacy.

It’s also a sleek, attractive device that fits in your pocket and can impress friends and colleagues, according to its makers.
The Blackphone is set to be released next month by the secure communications firm Silent Circle and the small Spanish-based manufacturer Geeksphone, amid a fever pitch of concern over revelations about vast US surveillance of data and telephony.
Read more: http://www.bangkokpost.com/tech/computer/390327/
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Obama’s NSA speech: Five burning questions

5 big questions left in the wake of Obama’s new NSA guidelines proposal.

President Barack Obama’s speech Friday outlined new changes to national intelligence gathering practices, but it left out a lot of specifics.
Ben Rhodes discusses whether the reforms to the NSA program will keep the U.S. safe once they are implemented.
While the proposals would reduce some of the latitude given to the National Security Agency in the name of homeland security, will they be enough to assuage a skeptical public? What’s Congress’ role in approving or implementing the president’s plan? And what does this mean for irked foreign allies?
Read more: http://nbcpolitics.nbcnews.com/_news/2014/01/17/22340505-obamas-nsa-speech-five-burning-questions
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Neiman Marcus CEO apologizes for data breach, offers free credit monitoring

Neiman Marcus still doesn’t know the scale and scope of the data breach.
Apology not accepted!

Target, Neiman Marcus, and possibly three other major retailers suffered data breaches over the holiday season, exposing customer credit card data to potential theft and abuse. Today, Neiman Marcus CEO Karen Katz has published a letter apologizing for the breach, and offering a free year of credit monitoring service to any customer who shopped at Neiman Marcus with a payment card over the past year. In addition to the apology, the website has a number of updates on the ongoing investigation. While we still don’t know the scale and scope of the data collected…
Read more: http://www.theverge.com/2014/1/16/5317378/neiman-marcus-ceo-apologizes-for-data-breach-offers-free-credit
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NSA can spy on computers when they’re not online

Secret technology uses radio waves to get past computer security.
It’s worse than we thought!

The US National Security Agency (NSA) has put spying software on 100,000 computers around the world that allows it to monitor them even if they are not connected to the internet, it was claimed yesterday.
The NSA is said to have developed a secret technology that uses radio waves to get past computer security and allows surveillance via a field station the size of a briefcase from up to eight miles away.
It is not clear if any of the affected machines are in the UK, but given the close co-operation between the two countries’ intelligence services, it would be surprising if not.
The claims in the New York Times give an astonishing insight into the methods used by the NSA to carry out its aims.
Read more: http://www.scotsman.com/news/sci-tech/nsa-can-spy-on-computers-when-they-re-not-online-1-3270091
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Back off, NSA: Blackphone promises to be the first privacy-focused smartphone

A step in the right direction.
Cell phones that protect your Privacy!

You may never have heard of Geeksphone, unless you take a particular interest in Firefox OS, but the Spanish manufacturer could be about to garner some global attention. It says it’ll launch a new handset at Mobile World Congress next month that will prioritize privacy and security instead of all the intrusions that smartphone users usually have to put up with…
Read more: http://www.engadget.com/2014/01/15/blackphone-privacy-and-security-android-smartphone/
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US transport chief highlights privacy concerns over car technology

We know everyone who breaks the law, we know when your doing it. We have GPS in your car, says Ford.

The increasing use of computer technology in cars raises questions about privacy, says US transportation secretary Anthony Foxx.
He was referring to the increased use of GPS and computer systems in cars that give them the ability to connect to smartphones and other devices.
Read more: http://www.computerweekly.com/news/2240212468/US-transport-chief-highlights-privacy-concerns-over-car-tech
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Facebook Snooping on Job Candidates May Backfire for Employers

Qualified candidates may be driven away due to the invasion of Privacy!  Many job applicants consider social media screening an invasion of privacy, researchers have found, opening the door for discrimination lawsuits.

It’s 2014, which means that Facebook will be 10 years old this February. Since the site launched it has become standard procedure for companies to screen job candidates based on their social media profiles. A recent study, however, suggests that the practice may actually drive away qualified applicants who feel that their privacy has been compromised.
Read more: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=facebook-snooping-on-job
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A Short History of Unsavory Tech Snooping

Here, for your sleep-losing pleasure, are some choice examples of the tech industry’s impressive history of trust violations. Six egregious instances of technological trust abuse.

This month my Scientific American column tackled the issue of high-tech trust. Bit by bit the Apples, Googles, Microsofts and, of course, the NSAs of the world have shaken our trust. They’ve abused it, one highly publicized breach after another, and left us fearful and wary.
Here, for your sleep-losing pleasure, are some choice examples of the tech industry’s impressive history of trust violations.
Read more: http://www.scientificamerican.com/article.cfm?id=pogue-a-short-history-of-unsavory-tech-snooping
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