I don't want to say I told you so...but yes I do.
The RFID industry trade groups continue to defend this rediculous technology for use in all of the wrong applications. The two worst? As I've been saying for the past few years - credit cards and passports.
Imagine the ramifacations of this with celebrities, political or public figures. What can be scanned from your daughter's purse or backpack?
It's not what you have to hide, it's what you've got to lose.
Tuesday, December 7, 2010
Friday, October 8, 2010
Caught Spying on Student, FBI Demands GPS Tracker Back | Threat Level | Wired.com
Routine oil change uncovers unwarranted tracking device. FBI shows up to reclaim it. Oops.
Read the full story at Wired.com
Read the full story at Wired.com
Labels:
FBI,
federal privacy invasion,
GPS tracking device
Friday, August 20, 2010
New state law bans employer credit checks in hiring
Character assassination by HR department employees favoring friends in applicant pool: $5 million
Privacy violation by leaks of credit reports of applicants by HR department employees: $6 million
Actually having to do an interview and decide on ability rather than circumstance: Priceless!
Clout St: New state law bans employer credit checks in hiring
Bravo, Illinois!
Privacy violation by leaks of credit reports of applicants by HR department employees: $6 million
Actually having to do an interview and decide on ability rather than circumstance: Priceless!
Clout St: New state law bans employer credit checks in hiring
Bravo, Illinois!
Thursday, August 12, 2010
TV Personality home address revealed by his cell phone photo. Yours is too.
Ever heard of "Geotags?"
Geotags are embedded in the photos taken by 'smart' mobile phones, and they give the exact longitude and latitude where the photo was taken. So disable the feature if your phone allows it, and be aware that when you post that photo on Twitter, Facebook or your blog, anyone can tell where it was taken.
Full Story:
Web Photo Geotags Can Reveal More Than You Wish - NYTimes.com
Think twice before referencing a photo to yourself, your home, or anyone else's. You may be jeopardizing the safety of your friends, your family, or yourself.
Geotags are embedded in the photos taken by 'smart' mobile phones, and they give the exact longitude and latitude where the photo was taken. So disable the feature if your phone allows it, and be aware that when you post that photo on Twitter, Facebook or your blog, anyone can tell where it was taken.
Full Story:
Web Photo Geotags Can Reveal More Than You Wish - NYTimes.com
Think twice before referencing a photo to yourself, your home, or anyone else's. You may be jeopardizing the safety of your friends, your family, or yourself.
Saturday, August 7, 2010
The Web's New Gold Mine: Your Secrets - WSJ.com
PC's gather personal data, sell it for one tenth of a penny:
The Web's New Gold Mine: Your Secrets - WSJ.com
The Web's New Gold Mine: Your Secrets - WSJ.com
BlackBerry bites back at governments | Technology | guardian.co.uk
Since President Obama's high-profile blackberry use, the platform has become one of the most secure. Intrustive governments, finding it the only phone they can't routinely monitor, are threatening to ban it's use.
Can Blackberry hold the fort?
Full story:
BlackBerry bites back at governments Technology guardian.co.uk
Friday, June 25, 2010
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