Updated: 6/11/2008; 5:51:58 PM.
Privacy News & Views
news, views and tips on individual electronic privacy subjects including identity theft; government regulations; legal issues and related technology and activities for personal, residential, soho and small organization users.
        

Thursday, October 21, 2004

 It began as one of the Bush administration's most ambitious homeland security efforts, a passenger screening program designed to use commercial records, terrorist watch lists and computer software to assess millions of travelers and target those who might pose a threat.  The system has cost almost $100 million. But it has not been turned on because it sparked protests from lawmakers and civil liberties advocates, who said it intruded too deeply into the lives of ordinary Americans. The Bush administration put off testing until after the election.

Now the choreographer of that program, a former intelligence official named Ben H. Bell III, is taking his ideas to a private company offshore, where he and his colleagues plan to use some of the same concepts, technology and contractors to assess people for risk, outside the reach of U.S. regulators, according to documents and interviews.


6:33:58 PM    comment []

 Security freeware is pretty popular. The price is right and everyone needs more security. What's the catch? But just because software is free doesn't exempt it from the requirements of paid software. Folks who write security tools should practice secure coding. Authors of security freeware should be accessible and accountable for the product they provide; in security-speak, the software should have readily identifiable, non-repudiable origins. Folks who make security software available should have competent, security-savvy staff to support and maintain it. 

So if you are considering security freeware, remember the five Ws. Who wrote the software? Can you identify and trust the developer?  What does the software do?  When should you use security freeware?  Why are you choosing freeware over commercial ware?  Where do you intend to use security freeware?


6:21:07 PM    comment []

 An August intrusion into a social researcher's computer may mean that more than a million Californians need to call the credit bureaus.

On Tuesday, the California Department of Social Services warned the providers and recipients of the state's In Home Support Services (IHSS) that their names, addresses, telephone numbers, Social Security numbers and dates of birth may be circulating the Internet. IHSS allows individuals to get paid for providing in-home care to senior citizens. The warning comes after an unknown attacker slipped in through a security hole in a social researcher's unsecured computer at the University of California, Berkeley, on Aug. 1, perhaps making off with 1.4 million database records containing personal information. The researcher noticed the trespass on Aug. 30 and the university notified the state in mid-September.


3:58:21 PM    comment []

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