Unfortunately, complete privacy is difficult to attain online. But you should protect what you can and you should also know why you're protecting your data. Beginning with the most obvious reasons, here are five reasons you should do your best to keep your private data private. Identity fraud or theft. Cookies can be troublesome if you don't know how to clear or delete cookies. The purpose of the computer cookie is to help the website keep track of your visits and activity. A setting that controls or limits third-party and tracking cookies can help protect your privacy online. Cookie 5.0.6 – Protect your online privacy. Cookie prevents third parties from hijacking your browsing experience. The sites you visit store. Most of the time, cookies are a good thing, but they can also track you. Take control of a tiny bit of your online privacy by blocking, deleting, and allowing only select cookies. Edaa for Internet Users. Welcome to a guide to online behavioural advertising and online privacy. On this website you'll find information about how behavioural advertising works, further information about cookies and the steps you can take to protect your privacy on the internet.
- Cookie 5 6 2 – Protect Your Online Privacy Screens
- Cookie 5 6 2 – Protect Your Online Privacy Fence
- Cookie 5 6 2 – Protect Your Online Privacy Concerns
For years, experts have tried to warn consumers that if you're getting something for free, you're actually the product. And by 'you,' experts generally mean, your 'data.'
This means that the actual consumers of a 'free' product are the companies that either pay to advertise to you, much like the old commercial TV model, or literally buy your data, often in the form of 'customer profiles.'
F-Secure's Chief Research Officer Mikko Hypponen often says, 'Data is the new oil.' Personal information the lubricant that helps the Internet run, but the massive accumulation of data also threatens to create problems that will be difficult to contain or reverse.
Mikko notes he'd like to be able to pay Google for its services with money, but Google doesn't even make that an option. It prefers your data. This may be because you're worth so much to Google — $223 a year, according to a 2014 estimate — that the company doesn't expect enough people would pay that much. Or maybe your data is priceless to a service with a parent company worth more than $600 billion.
Of course, Google isn't the only one who wants your data. And at least anything the search giant does with your information you've already agreed to by accepting its terms and conditions, which you surely have memorized and discussed with your attorney.
What? You haven't?
'It doesn't matter what it says in the policy,' Mikko has said. 'Nobody reads them.'
These sprawling documents are so ponderous that they've become such a joke that even some apps have been accused of not taking Apple's terms and conditions seriously.
Over and over, you've been advised that you protect your private data.
That means that in addition to updated application and Internet Security software, you should use a trusted, VPN that doesn't rely on ads and blocks online tracking. Be password smart and use two-factor authentication anywhere you can. You should also stick to trusted, well-reviewed apps from official app stores, refrain from posting personally identifiable information and pre-travel information on social media and lock up all your devices when not in use.
Unfortunately, complete privacy is difficult to attain online. But you should protect what you can and you should also know why you're protecting your data.
Beginning with the most obvious reasons, here are five reasons you should do your best to keep your private data private.
- Identity fraud or theft
Protecting your devices and your accounts is essential for maintaining the security of your privately identifiable data and thus your financial identity. Phishing scams that lure you into offering your private data — such as taxpayer identification, national insurance number or credit card information — can be used to access your accounts or create false ones in your name. The more information you make public online, the more vulnerable you are to such scams, which are often crafted to resemble legitimate communication from your bank or other institutions. Avoid clicking on links in emails, especially unsolicited emails. And if anyone asks you for your private data online, contact that institution directly by phone to follow up. - Actual crime
Posting your travel schedule in advance could make it easier for thieves to find an empty house to rob. Online stalking tied to actual theft is relatively rare, but what is increasingly common is cyberstalking with a criminal component — such as sextortion. 'Sextortion cases involve what are effectively online, remote sexual assaults, sometimes over great distances, sometimes even crossing international borders, and sometimes…involving a great many victims,' the Brookings Institution reports. As the victims of this crime are often minors who may be scarred for life by being forced to share compromising images of themselves, law enforcement has began taking this sort of crime more seriously. Preventing this crime requires all the practical steps for protecting your data plus taking extra steps like covering up or disconnecting your webcam when it's not in use and being extraordinarily careful about the sort or pictures you share online and store on your devices. The more personal information you make public, the easier it is for a stranger to ingratiate into your life and begin the process of harassing you online. - You can't be sure how your data will be used against you.
Last year, The Guardian reported that one of the largest insurance companies in Britain was examining Facebook profiles to help set the cost of consumers car insurance. Twitter wants your phone number to help secure your account but it also helps them match your account to an advertising profile that lets their advertisers know what your favorite breakfast cereal is. And even information we don't actively share, such as our browsing history, is used by ad networks to feed us advertising that makes us more likely to spend money online. That's by no means a crime on par with identity fraud or sextortion, but it is an example of how our private data can be used against us to diminish the control of our digital identities. - You can't be sure what you're giving access to.
Even if you don't overshare with your friends on Facebook, you still may be shocked to learn what you're actually sharing with Facebook itself. The world's largest social network seems to track your geographical location through GPS, Bluetooth or Wi-Fi signals. Snapchat doesn't just allow itself access to the photos and videos you post but the entire contents of your device's media library. And you agreed to this when you agreed to their terms and conditions. These giant corporations likely won't use that information for anything other than their business, but this information could potentially be hacked and end up in the wrong hands. Or perhaps their are uses for it we can't even imagine… yet. - The future.
Before too long your dishwasher will likely have a web server in in it. Your toaster will connect to the internet, as will most anything you can plug in. This will provide manufacturers amazing abilities to track how their products are used for their benefit if not yours. And that data may end up being an asset that could be used to sell to another company looking for information about how to market to you a little better.
Your digital identity is tied to your data. Getting into the practice of securing it now will help protect you and your family now while preparing you for a future we cannot yet conceive.
April 2002
by Stanton McCandlish, EFF Technology Director
Vers. 2.0 - Apr. 10, 2002
Note: Mention of specific product, service or company names does
not constitute EFF endorsement or recommendation. Examples and links
are provided as starting points for readers, who must make up their
own minds about how much security they need and whether particular
offerings will suit their needs.
For information about the law and technology of government surveillance in the United States, check out EFF's Surveillance Self-Defense project.
1) Do not reveal personal information inadvertently.
You may be 'shedding' personal details, including e-mail addresses
and other contact information, without even knowing it unless you
properly configure your Web browser. In your browser's 'Setup',
'Options' or 'Preferences' menus, you may wish to use a pseudonym instead of your real name, and
not enter an e-mail address, nor provide other personally identifiable
information that you don't wish to share. When visiting a site you
trust you can choose to give them your info, in forms on their site;
there is no need for your browser to potentially make this information
available to all comers. Also be on the lookout for system-wide
'Internet defaults' programs on your computer (some examples include
Window's Internet Control Panel, and MacOS's Configuration Manager,
and the third-party Mac utility named Internet Config). While they are useful
for various things, like keeping multiple Web browers and other
Internet tools consistent in how the treat downloaded files and such,
they should probably also be anonymized just like your browser itself,
if they contain any fields for personal information. Households with
children may have an additional 'security problem' - have you set
clear rules for your kids, so that they know not to reveal personal
information unless you OK it on a site-by-site basis?
2) Turn on cookie notices in your Web browser, and/or use cookie management software or infomediaries.
'Cookies' are tidbits of information that Web sites store on your
computer, temporarily or more-or-less permanently. In many cases
cookies are useful and inocuous. They may be passwords and user IDs,
so that you do not have to keep retyping them every time you load a
new page at the site that issued the cookie. Other cookies however, can be used for 'data
mining' purposes, to track your motions through a Web site, the time
you spend there, what links you click on and other details that the
company wants to record, usually for marketing purposes. Most cookies
can only be read by the party that created them. However, some companies
that manage online banner advertising are, in essence, cookie sharing rings. They
can track which pages you load, which ads you click on, etc., and share this information
with all of their client Web sites (who may number in the hundreds, even thousands.) Some
examples of these cookie sharing rings are DoubleClick, AdCast
and LinkExchange. For a demonstration of how they work, see:
http://privacy.net/track/
Browsers are starting
to allow user control over cookies. Netscape, for example, allows you
to see a notice when a site tries to write a cookie file to your hard
drive, and gives you some information about it, allowing you to decide
whether or not to accept it. (Be on the lookout for cookies the
function of which is not apparent, which go to other sites than the one you are trying to load, or which
are not temporary). It also allows you to automatically block all
cookies that are being sent to third parties (or to block all cookies,
entirely, but this will make some sites inoperable). Internet
Explorer has a cookie management interface in addition to
Netscape-like features, allowing you to selectively enable or disable
cookies on a site-by-site basis, even to allow cookies for a site
generally, but delete a specific cookie you are suspicious about. With
Internet Explorer you can also turn on cookies for a site temporarily
then disable them when you no longer need them (e.g., at an online
bookstore that requires cookies to process an order, but whom you
don't want to track what books you are looking at, what links you are
following, etc., the rest of the time.) Turning on cookie warnings
will cause alert boxes to pop up, but after some practice you may learn
to hit 'Decline' so fast that you hardly notice them any more. The
idea is to only enable cookies on sites that require them AND whom you
trust.
You may also wish to try out 'alternative' browsers like
Mozilla (Windows, Mac, Linux), Opera (Windows, Mac, Linux), Konqueror (Linux),
and iCab (Mac), which may offer better cookie management.
You can also use cookie management software and services. One example is
the Internet Junkbuster Proxy ( http://www.junkbusters.com/ht/en/ijb.html ).
It runs on Win95/98/NT and
Unix/Linux
(no Mac version), and can selectively
block cookies for you (and banner ads, to boot). interMute ( http://www.intermute.com/ )
does likewise (and more - blocks popup windows, etc.; only runs under Windows).
Another Windows-only
solution is AdSubtract ( http://www.adsubtract.com/ )
A comparable product (Linux, Solaris, Windows) is GuideScope ( http://www.guidescope.com/home/ )
A Java-based solution called Muffin ( http://muffin.doit.org/ ) is also available. While it will run
on Mac, Windows and Unix systems, it is definitely for 'power users', as it is complicated
to set up and operate effectively.
Another recent option (Linux, Mac, Windows) is the
( http://www.webwasher.com/ ), which has advanced cookie filtering capabilities,
especially with the Seclude-It and Secretmaker plug-ins available at the same site.
One more (Windows) is CookiePal ( http://www.kburra.com/cpal.html ),
and yet another (Windows) is ( http://www.thelimitsoft.com/cookie.html ).
There are also numerous 'cookie eater' applications,
some which run on a schedule or in the background, that delete cookie files for you. As with turning off
cookies entirely, you may have trouble accessing sites that require certain cookies (though
in most cases the worst that will happen is that you'll have to re-enter a login ID and password
you thought were saved.) 'Eating' the cookies periodically still permits sites to track what
you're doing for a short time (i.e., the time between successive deletion of your cookie file),
but thwarts attempts to discern and record your actions over time.
Yet another option is to use an 'infomediary' (some are home-use software products, others may be network-based services),
such as SeigeSoft's
SiegeSurfer ( http://www.siegesoft.com/_html/tutorial.asp ),
Zero Knowledge Systems' Freedom
( http://www.freedom.net ), among others. These products/services act as a proxy or
shield between you and sites you visit, and can completely disguise to Web sites where you are coming from
and who you are (and intercept all cookies). Most are Windows-only at this point, though
Orangatango ( http://www.orangatango.com/ ), and SafeWeb
and ( http://www.safeweb.com ) also offer
such services that are Web-based and not platform-dependent.
WARNING: Do not confuse honest infomediaries
with 'identity managmenet services' like Microsoft's Passport service or Novell's DigitalMe. While you may gain some
temporary convenience at sites that support them, you'll lose essential privacy, because these services are not
there to serve you but to serve marketing purposes by collecting a vast array of information about you and selling it.
The best solution doesn't exist yet: Full cookie management abilities built
into the browsers themselves. Only increased user pressure on Microsoft, Netscape
and other browser makers can make this happen. Users should ultimately be able
to reject cookies on a whole-domain basis, reject all third-party cookies by default, reject all cookies that are not essential
for the transaction at hand, receive notice of exactly what a cookie is intended for,
and be able to set default behaviors and permissions rather than have to interact with cookies on a page-by-page
basis. This just isn't possible yet. You may wish to contact the company that makes your browser software and
demand these essential features in the next version.
3) Keep a 'clean' e-mail address.
When mailing to unknown parties; posting to newsgroups, mailing
lists, chat rooms and other public spaces on the Net; or publishing a
Web page that mentions your e-mail address, it is best to do this from
a 'side' account, some pseudonymous or simply alternate address, and
to use your main or preferred address only on small, members-only
lists and with known, trusted individuals. Addresses that are posted
(even as part of message headers) in public spaces can be easily
discovered by spammers (online junk mailers) and added to their list of
targets. If your public 'throw away' address gets spammed enough to become
annoying, you can simply kill it off, and start a new one. Your
friends, boss, etc., will still know your 'real' address. You can use
a free (advertising-supported) e-mail service provider like Yahoo Mail
or Hotmail for such 'side' accounts. It is best to use a 'real'
Internet service provider for your main account, and to examine their
privacy policies and terms of service, as some 'freemail' services may have
poor privacy track records. You may find it works best to use an
e-mail package that allows mulitiple user IDs and addresses (a.k.a.
'personalities', 'aliases') so that you do not have to switch between multiple
programs to manange and use more than one e-mail address
(though you may
have to use a Web browser rather than an e-mail program to read your
mail in your 'throw away' accounts - many freemail providers do not
allow POP or IMAP connections). If you are 'required'
to give an e-mail address to use a site (but will not be required to
check your mail for some kind of access code they send you), you can
use 'someuser@example.com' (example.com is a non-existent site,
set up by the Internet standards to be used as an example that will
never accidentally coincide with anyone's real e-mail address, which
is always a danger if you just make up one off the top of your head.)
4) Don't reveal personal details to strangers or just-met
'friends'.
The speed of Internet communication is often
mirrored
in rapid online
acquaintanceships and friendships. But it is important to realize that
you don't really know who these people are or what they are like in
real life. A thousand miles away, you don't have friends-of-friends
or other references about this person. Be also wary of face-to-face
meetings. If you and your new e-friend wish to meet in person, do it
in a public place. Bringing a friend along can also be a good idea.
One needn't be paranoid, but one should not be an easy mark, either.
Some personal information you might wish to withhold until you know
someone much better would include your full name, place of employment,
phone number, and street address (among more obvious things like
credit card numbers, etc.) Needless to say, such information should
not be put on personal home pages. (If you have a work home page, it
may well have work contact information on it, but you needn't reveal
this page to everyone you meet in a chat room.) For this and other
reasons, many people maintain two personal home pages, a work-related
one, and an 'off duty' version. In the commercial sector, too, beware
'fast-met friends'. A common
'social engineering'
form
of industrial espionage is to befriend someone online just long
enough to get them to reveal insider information.
Mikko notes he'd like to be able to pay Google for its services with money, but Google doesn't even make that an option. It prefers your data. This may be because you're worth so much to Google — $223 a year, according to a 2014 estimate — that the company doesn't expect enough people would pay that much. Or maybe your data is priceless to a service with a parent company worth more than $600 billion.
Of course, Google isn't the only one who wants your data. And at least anything the search giant does with your information you've already agreed to by accepting its terms and conditions, which you surely have memorized and discussed with your attorney.
What? You haven't?
'It doesn't matter what it says in the policy,' Mikko has said. 'Nobody reads them.'
These sprawling documents are so ponderous that they've become such a joke that even some apps have been accused of not taking Apple's terms and conditions seriously.
Over and over, you've been advised that you protect your private data.
That means that in addition to updated application and Internet Security software, you should use a trusted, VPN that doesn't rely on ads and blocks online tracking. Be password smart and use two-factor authentication anywhere you can. You should also stick to trusted, well-reviewed apps from official app stores, refrain from posting personally identifiable information and pre-travel information on social media and lock up all your devices when not in use.
Unfortunately, complete privacy is difficult to attain online. But you should protect what you can and you should also know why you're protecting your data.
Beginning with the most obvious reasons, here are five reasons you should do your best to keep your private data private.
- Identity fraud or theft
Protecting your devices and your accounts is essential for maintaining the security of your privately identifiable data and thus your financial identity. Phishing scams that lure you into offering your private data — such as taxpayer identification, national insurance number or credit card information — can be used to access your accounts or create false ones in your name. The more information you make public online, the more vulnerable you are to such scams, which are often crafted to resemble legitimate communication from your bank or other institutions. Avoid clicking on links in emails, especially unsolicited emails. And if anyone asks you for your private data online, contact that institution directly by phone to follow up. - Actual crime
Posting your travel schedule in advance could make it easier for thieves to find an empty house to rob. Online stalking tied to actual theft is relatively rare, but what is increasingly common is cyberstalking with a criminal component — such as sextortion. 'Sextortion cases involve what are effectively online, remote sexual assaults, sometimes over great distances, sometimes even crossing international borders, and sometimes…involving a great many victims,' the Brookings Institution reports. As the victims of this crime are often minors who may be scarred for life by being forced to share compromising images of themselves, law enforcement has began taking this sort of crime more seriously. Preventing this crime requires all the practical steps for protecting your data plus taking extra steps like covering up or disconnecting your webcam when it's not in use and being extraordinarily careful about the sort or pictures you share online and store on your devices. The more personal information you make public, the easier it is for a stranger to ingratiate into your life and begin the process of harassing you online. - You can't be sure how your data will be used against you.
Last year, The Guardian reported that one of the largest insurance companies in Britain was examining Facebook profiles to help set the cost of consumers car insurance. Twitter wants your phone number to help secure your account but it also helps them match your account to an advertising profile that lets their advertisers know what your favorite breakfast cereal is. And even information we don't actively share, such as our browsing history, is used by ad networks to feed us advertising that makes us more likely to spend money online. That's by no means a crime on par with identity fraud or sextortion, but it is an example of how our private data can be used against us to diminish the control of our digital identities. - You can't be sure what you're giving access to.
Even if you don't overshare with your friends on Facebook, you still may be shocked to learn what you're actually sharing with Facebook itself. The world's largest social network seems to track your geographical location through GPS, Bluetooth or Wi-Fi signals. Snapchat doesn't just allow itself access to the photos and videos you post but the entire contents of your device's media library. And you agreed to this when you agreed to their terms and conditions. These giant corporations likely won't use that information for anything other than their business, but this information could potentially be hacked and end up in the wrong hands. Or perhaps their are uses for it we can't even imagine… yet. - The future.
Before too long your dishwasher will likely have a web server in in it. Your toaster will connect to the internet, as will most anything you can plug in. This will provide manufacturers amazing abilities to track how their products are used for their benefit if not yours. And that data may end up being an asset that could be used to sell to another company looking for information about how to market to you a little better.
Your digital identity is tied to your data. Getting into the practice of securing it now will help protect you and your family now while preparing you for a future we cannot yet conceive.
April 2002
by Stanton McCandlish, EFF Technology Director
Vers. 2.0 - Apr. 10, 2002
Note: Mention of specific product, service or company names does
not constitute EFF endorsement or recommendation. Examples and links
are provided as starting points for readers, who must make up their
own minds about how much security they need and whether particular
offerings will suit their needs.
For information about the law and technology of government surveillance in the United States, check out EFF's Surveillance Self-Defense project.
1) Do not reveal personal information inadvertently.
You may be 'shedding' personal details, including e-mail addresses
and other contact information, without even knowing it unless you
properly configure your Web browser. In your browser's 'Setup',
'Options' or 'Preferences' menus, you may wish to use a pseudonym instead of your real name, and
not enter an e-mail address, nor provide other personally identifiable
information that you don't wish to share. When visiting a site you
trust you can choose to give them your info, in forms on their site;
there is no need for your browser to potentially make this information
available to all comers. Also be on the lookout for system-wide
'Internet defaults' programs on your computer (some examples include
Window's Internet Control Panel, and MacOS's Configuration Manager,
and the third-party Mac utility named Internet Config). While they are useful
for various things, like keeping multiple Web browers and other
Internet tools consistent in how the treat downloaded files and such,
they should probably also be anonymized just like your browser itself,
if they contain any fields for personal information. Households with
children may have an additional 'security problem' - have you set
clear rules for your kids, so that they know not to reveal personal
information unless you OK it on a site-by-site basis?
2) Turn on cookie notices in your Web browser, and/or use cookie management software or infomediaries.
'Cookies' are tidbits of information that Web sites store on your
computer, temporarily or more-or-less permanently. In many cases
cookies are useful and inocuous. They may be passwords and user IDs,
so that you do not have to keep retyping them every time you load a
new page at the site that issued the cookie. Other cookies however, can be used for 'data
mining' purposes, to track your motions through a Web site, the time
you spend there, what links you click on and other details that the
company wants to record, usually for marketing purposes. Most cookies
can only be read by the party that created them. However, some companies
that manage online banner advertising are, in essence, cookie sharing rings. They
can track which pages you load, which ads you click on, etc., and share this information
with all of their client Web sites (who may number in the hundreds, even thousands.) Some
examples of these cookie sharing rings are DoubleClick, AdCast
and LinkExchange. For a demonstration of how they work, see:
http://privacy.net/track/
Browsers are starting
to allow user control over cookies. Netscape, for example, allows you
to see a notice when a site tries to write a cookie file to your hard
drive, and gives you some information about it, allowing you to decide
whether or not to accept it. (Be on the lookout for cookies the
function of which is not apparent, which go to other sites than the one you are trying to load, or which
are not temporary). It also allows you to automatically block all
cookies that are being sent to third parties (or to block all cookies,
entirely, but this will make some sites inoperable). Internet
Explorer has a cookie management interface in addition to
Netscape-like features, allowing you to selectively enable or disable
cookies on a site-by-site basis, even to allow cookies for a site
generally, but delete a specific cookie you are suspicious about. With
Internet Explorer you can also turn on cookies for a site temporarily
then disable them when you no longer need them (e.g., at an online
bookstore that requires cookies to process an order, but whom you
don't want to track what books you are looking at, what links you are
following, etc., the rest of the time.) Turning on cookie warnings
will cause alert boxes to pop up, but after some practice you may learn
to hit 'Decline' so fast that you hardly notice them any more. The
idea is to only enable cookies on sites that require them AND whom you
trust.
You may also wish to try out 'alternative' browsers like
Mozilla (Windows, Mac, Linux), Opera (Windows, Mac, Linux), Konqueror (Linux),
and iCab (Mac), which may offer better cookie management.
You can also use cookie management software and services. One example is
the Internet Junkbuster Proxy ( http://www.junkbusters.com/ht/en/ijb.html ).
It runs on Win95/98/NT and
Unix/Linux
(no Mac version), and can selectively
block cookies for you (and banner ads, to boot). interMute ( http://www.intermute.com/ )
does likewise (and more - blocks popup windows, etc.; only runs under Windows).
Another Windows-only
solution is AdSubtract ( http://www.adsubtract.com/ )
A comparable product (Linux, Solaris, Windows) is GuideScope ( http://www.guidescope.com/home/ )
A Java-based solution called Muffin ( http://muffin.doit.org/ ) is also available. While it will run
on Mac, Windows and Unix systems, it is definitely for 'power users', as it is complicated
to set up and operate effectively.
Another recent option (Linux, Mac, Windows) is the
( http://www.webwasher.com/ ), which has advanced cookie filtering capabilities,
especially with the Seclude-It and Secretmaker plug-ins available at the same site.
One more (Windows) is CookiePal ( http://www.kburra.com/cpal.html ),
and yet another (Windows) is ( http://www.thelimitsoft.com/cookie.html ).
There are also numerous 'cookie eater' applications,
some which run on a schedule or in the background, that delete cookie files for you. As with turning off
cookies entirely, you may have trouble accessing sites that require certain cookies (though
in most cases the worst that will happen is that you'll have to re-enter a login ID and password
you thought were saved.) 'Eating' the cookies periodically still permits sites to track what
you're doing for a short time (i.e., the time between successive deletion of your cookie file),
but thwarts attempts to discern and record your actions over time.
Yet another option is to use an 'infomediary' (some are home-use software products, others may be network-based services),
such as SeigeSoft's
SiegeSurfer ( http://www.siegesoft.com/_html/tutorial.asp ),
Zero Knowledge Systems' Freedom
( http://www.freedom.net ), among others. These products/services act as a proxy or
shield between you and sites you visit, and can completely disguise to Web sites where you are coming from
and who you are (and intercept all cookies). Most are Windows-only at this point, though
Orangatango ( http://www.orangatango.com/ ), and SafeWeb
and ( http://www.safeweb.com ) also offer
such services that are Web-based and not platform-dependent.
WARNING: Do not confuse honest infomediaries
with 'identity managmenet services' like Microsoft's Passport service or Novell's DigitalMe. While you may gain some
temporary convenience at sites that support them, you'll lose essential privacy, because these services are not
there to serve you but to serve marketing purposes by collecting a vast array of information about you and selling it.
The best solution doesn't exist yet: Full cookie management abilities built
into the browsers themselves. Only increased user pressure on Microsoft, Netscape
and other browser makers can make this happen. Users should ultimately be able
to reject cookies on a whole-domain basis, reject all third-party cookies by default, reject all cookies that are not essential
for the transaction at hand, receive notice of exactly what a cookie is intended for,
and be able to set default behaviors and permissions rather than have to interact with cookies on a page-by-page
basis. This just isn't possible yet. You may wish to contact the company that makes your browser software and
demand these essential features in the next version.
3) Keep a 'clean' e-mail address.
When mailing to unknown parties; posting to newsgroups, mailing
lists, chat rooms and other public spaces on the Net; or publishing a
Web page that mentions your e-mail address, it is best to do this from
a 'side' account, some pseudonymous or simply alternate address, and
to use your main or preferred address only on small, members-only
lists and with known, trusted individuals. Addresses that are posted
(even as part of message headers) in public spaces can be easily
discovered by spammers (online junk mailers) and added to their list of
targets. If your public 'throw away' address gets spammed enough to become
annoying, you can simply kill it off, and start a new one. Your
friends, boss, etc., will still know your 'real' address. You can use
a free (advertising-supported) e-mail service provider like Yahoo Mail
or Hotmail for such 'side' accounts. It is best to use a 'real'
Internet service provider for your main account, and to examine their
privacy policies and terms of service, as some 'freemail' services may have
poor privacy track records. You may find it works best to use an
e-mail package that allows mulitiple user IDs and addresses (a.k.a.
'personalities', 'aliases') so that you do not have to switch between multiple
programs to manange and use more than one e-mail address
(though you may
have to use a Web browser rather than an e-mail program to read your
mail in your 'throw away' accounts - many freemail providers do not
allow POP or IMAP connections). If you are 'required'
to give an e-mail address to use a site (but will not be required to
check your mail for some kind of access code they send you), you can
use 'someuser@example.com' (example.com is a non-existent site,
set up by the Internet standards to be used as an example that will
never accidentally coincide with anyone's real e-mail address, which
is always a danger if you just make up one off the top of your head.)
4) Don't reveal personal details to strangers or just-met
'friends'.
The speed of Internet communication is often
mirrored
in rapid online
acquaintanceships and friendships. But it is important to realize that
you don't really know who these people are or what they are like in
real life. A thousand miles away, you don't have friends-of-friends
or other references about this person. Be also wary of face-to-face
meetings. If you and your new e-friend wish to meet in person, do it
in a public place. Bringing a friend along can also be a good idea.
One needn't be paranoid, but one should not be an easy mark, either.
Some personal information you might wish to withhold until you know
someone much better would include your full name, place of employment,
phone number, and street address (among more obvious things like
credit card numbers, etc.) Needless to say, such information should
not be put on personal home pages. (If you have a work home page, it
may well have work contact information on it, but you needn't reveal
this page to everyone you meet in a chat room.) For this and other
reasons, many people maintain two personal home pages, a work-related
one, and an 'off duty' version. In the commercial sector, too, beware
'fast-met friends'. A common
'social engineering'
form
of industrial espionage is to befriend someone online just long
enough to get them to reveal insider information.
5) Realize you may be monitored at work, avoid sending highly
personal e-mail to mailing lists, and keep sensitive files on your
home computer.
In most US states and many if not most countries, employees have little if any privacy protection
from monitoring by employers. When discussing sensitive matters in
e-mail or other online media, be certain
with whom you are communicating
. If
you replied to a mailing list post, check the headers - is your reply
going to the person you think it is, or to the whole list? Also be
aware that an increasing number of employers are monitoring and
recording employee Web usage, as well as e-mail. This could compromise
home banking passwords and other sensitive information. Keep private
data and private Net usage
private
, at home.
See this CNN/IDG article on 'snoopware' (which may not be limited to your office..):
6) Beware sites that offer some sort of reward or prize in
exchange for your
contact information or other personal details
.
There's a very high probability that they are gathering this
information for direct marketing purposes. In many cases your name and
address are worth much more to them because they can sell it to other
marketers (who can do the same in turn..) than what
you are (supposedly) getting from them. Be especially wary of
sweepstakes and contests. You probably won't win, but the marketer
sure will if you give them your information.
7) Do not reply to spammers, for any reason.
'Spam', or unsolicited bulk e-mail, is something you are probably
already familiar with (and tired of). If you get a spammed
advertisment, certainly don't take the sender up on whatever offer
they are making, but also don't bother replying with 'REMOVE' in the
subject line, or whatever (probably bogus) unsubscribe instructions
you've been given). This simply confirms that your address is being
read by a real person, and you'll find yourself on dozens more
spammers' lists in no time. If you open the message, watch your
outgoing mail queue to make sure that a 'return receipt' message was
not generated to be sent back to the spammer automatically. (It is
best to queue your mail and send manually, rather than send
immediately, so that you can see what's about to go out before it's
actually sent. You should also turn off your mailer's automatic
honoring of return receipt requests, if any.) If you have a good
Internet service provider, you may
be able to forward copies of spam e-mail to the system administrators
who can route a complaint to the ISP of the spammer (or if you know a
lot about mail headers and DNS tools, you can probably contact these
ISPs yourself to complain about the spammer.) If you are getting
spammed a lot, there are a variety of filters and anti-spam
services available, including:
Spam Hater ( http://www.cix.co.uk/~net-services/spam/spam_hater.htm ) for Windows users;
TAG ( http://alcor.concordia.ca/topics/email/auto/procmail/spam ) for experienced Unix users;
SpamBouncer ( http://www.spambouncer.org ) for experienced Unix users (works well with TAG);
BrightMail ( http://www.brightmail.com/ ) for ISPs;
SpamCop ( http://spamcop.net/ ) for anyone;
More information on fighting spam is available at:
Elsop's Anti-Spam Page ( http://www.elsop.com/wrc/nospam.htm ); Xscope 4 4 1.
MaximumDownforce's Info-n-Links Page( http://www.maximumdownforce.com/hotlinks.html );
Whew's Anti-Spam Campaign ( http://www.whew.com/Spammers/ ).
Many of these are difficult to use for novices, and some require Unix
expertise. Others are services that deal with ISPs only, not end users.
8) Be conscious of Web security.
Never submit a credit card number or other highly sensitive
personal information without first making sure your connection is
secure (encrypted). In Netscape, look for an closed lock (Windows) or unbroken key (Mac) icon at the
bottom of the browser window. In Internet Explorer, look for a closed
lock icon at the bottom (Windows) or near the top (Mac) of the browser window.
In any browser, look at
the URL (Web address) line - a secure connection will begin 'https://'
intead of 'http://'. If you are at page that asks for such information
but shows 'http://' try adding the 's' yourself and hitting enter to
reload the page (for Netscape or IE; in another browser, use whatever method is required
by your browser to reload the page at the new URL). If you get an
error message that the page or site does not exist, this probably
means that the company is so clueless - and careless with your
information and your money - that they don't even have Web security.
Take your business elsewhere.
Your browser itself gives away information about you, if your IP address
can be tied to your identity (this is most commonly true of DSL and broadband
users, rather than modem users, who are a dwindling minority). For a demo
of how much detail is automatically given out about your system by your
browser, see: http://privacy.net/analyze/ .
Also be on the lookout for 'spyware' - software that may be included
with applications you install (games, utilities, whatever), the
purpose of which is to silently spy on your online habits and other
details and report it back to the company whose product you are using.
One MS Windows solution for disabling spyware is the Ad-aware program
(shareware, from http://www.lavasoft.de/ ),
which can remove spyware from your computer; it is based on a large
collaboratively maintained database of information about spyware.
Linux and Mac products of this sort are likely to appear soon.
Java, Javascript and ActiveX can also be used for spyware purposes.
Support for these scripting languages can be disabled in your
browser's configuration options (a.k.a. preferences, settings,
or properties). It is safest to surf with them turned off,
and only turn them on when a site you trust and want to use
requires them. If you don't know if your browser supports these
languages or don't know if they are turned on you can use BrowserSpy
to find out (along with a lot of other information about your Web
browsing software): http://gemal.dk/browserspy/
Another form of spyware consists of 'webbugs', which typically
manifest themselves as invisible or nearly invisible image files
tied to cookies and javascripts that track your Web usage.
See http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=webbugs+%22web+bugs%22
for more information on webbugs. See also this webbug FAQ, http://www.nthelp.com/OEtest/web_bug_faq.htm for more details.
Dealing with webbugs when they are embedded in an otherwise legitimate page
is thorny, as there isn't a surefire way to distinguish between webbugs and
run-of-the-mill image files. But see the Privacy Foundation's
Bugnosis webbug detector ( http://www.bugnosis.org/ - Windows MSIE only).
When webbugs are loaded into popup pages, the solution is to close the popups
(usually a small page with an ad, though some of them are 'micropages'
that you can barely see. A few may even use javascript tricks to keep
you from closing them. If this happens, close all other browser windows,
then you should be able to close the bug window). Another tip for defeating
webbugs is to reject any cookies from Doubleclick, AdCast, LinkExchange and other
'ad exchange networks' (cookie sharing rings), and any other cookies that
are not from the site you are currently visiting (most third-party cookies
are basically webbugs). Lastly on this topic, be aware that HTML-capable
e-mail programs and Usenet newsreaders make webbugs work in your e-mail
and newsgroups. If your mailer or newsreader has an option to turn off
cookie support, you should certainly do so. There is hardly any imaginable
legitimate use for a cookie in an email or a newsgroup posting.
9) Be conscious of home computer security.
On the other side of the coin, your own computer may be a trouble
spot for Internet security.
If you have a DSL line, broadband cable modem or other connection
to the Internet that is up and running 24 hours (including T1 at the office without a firewall
or NAT),
unlike a modem-and-phone-line connection, be sure to turn your computer off
when you are not using it. Most home PCs have pitifully poor security
compared to the Unix workstations that power most commercial Web
sites. System crackers search for vulnerable, unattended DSL-connected
home computers, and can invade them with surprising ease, rifiling
through files looking for credit card numbers or other sensitive data,
or even 'taking over' the computer and quietly using it for their own
purposes, such as lauching attacks on other computers elsewhere -
attacks you could initially be blamed for. Firewall hardware and software is
another option that can protect you from these kinds of attacks (available
at any computer store; freeware and shareware implementations may be
available at sites like http://www.shareware.com
or http://www.download.com.
10) Examine privacy policies and seals.
When you are considering whether or not to do business with a Web
site, there are other factors than a secure connection you have to consider that are equally
important to Web security. Does the site provide offline contact
information, including a postal address? Does the site have a
prominently-posted privacy policy? If so, what does it say? (Just
because they call it a 'privacy policy' doesn't mean it will protect
you - read it for yourself. Many are little more than disclaimers
saying that you have no privacy! So read them carefully.) If the
policy sounds OK to you, do you have a reason to believe it? Have you
ever heard of this company? What is their reputation? And are they
backing up their privacy statement with a seal program such as TRUSTe
http://www.truste.org/ or
BBBonline http://www.bbbonline.org/? (While imperfect, such
programs hold Web sites to at least some minimal baseline standards, and may revoke, with much fanfare, the
approval-seal licenses of bad-acting companies that do not
keep their word.) If you see a seal, is it real? Check with the
seal-issuing site to make sure the seal isn't a fake. And examine
terms carefully, especially if you are subscribing to a service rather
than buying a product. Look out for auto-rebilling scams and hidden
fees.
11) Remember that YOU decide what information about yourself to
reveal, when, why, and to whom.
Don't give out personally-identifiable information too easily. Just as
you might think twice about giving some clerk at the mall your home
address and phone number, keep in mind that simply because a site asks
for or demands personal information from you does not mean you have to
give it. You do have to give accurate billing information if you are
buying something, of course, but if you are registering with a free
site that is a little too nosy for you, there is no law (in most places) against
providing them with pseudonymous information. (However, it would
probably be polite to use obviously fake addresses, such as '123 No
Such Street, Nowhere, DC 01010'. If they are generating mailings based
on this information - presumably in accordance with the terms of their
privacy policy - they can probably weed such addresses out and not
waste the postage on them. Definitely do NOT use someone else's real
address!)
Cookie 5 6 2 – Protect Your Online Privacy Screens
However, if you are required to agree to
terms of service before using the free service, be sure those terms
do not include a requirement that you provide correct information,
unless the penalty is simply not being allowed to use the service
any more, and you're willing to pay that price if they figure out
you are not providing them with your actual personally-identifiable
information.
12) Use encryption!
Last but certainly not least, there are other privacy threats
besides abusive marketers, nosy bosses, spammers and scammers. Some
of the threats include industrial espionage, government surveillance,
identity theft, disgruntled former associates, and system crackers.
Relatively easy-to-use e-mail and file encryption software is
available for free, such as Pretty Good Privacy (PGP, available at: http://www.pgpi.org/), which runs on
almost all computers and even integrates seamlessly with most major
e-mail software. Good encryption uses very robust secret codes, that
are difficult if not impossible to crack, to protect your data. You
can also use specialized services (some free, some pay)
that go beyond infomediary services, including running all connections
through a securely encrypted 'tunnel', anonymous dialup, even anonymous
Web publishing. Another type of product is SSH tunnelling (port forwarding) packages, such as FSecure SSH ( http://www.fsecure.com/products/ssh/ ),
and SecureCRT ( http://www.vandyke.com/products/securecrt/ ).
Hopefully some day soon, good encryption and computer security will simply
be included in all ISP services and operating systems, but for now you have to actively
seek out good service providers and add-on products.
Cookie 5 6 2 – Protect Your Online Privacy Fence
For more information on protecting your online privacy:
Cookie 5 6 2 – Protect Your Online Privacy Concerns
- EFF Privacy Archive - http://www.eff.org/Privacy/
- 'Protecting Yourself Online' Book -
- TRUSTe's 'Protecting Your Privacy Online' FAQ - http://truste.org/consumers/users_faqs.html
- Privacy Rights Clearinghouse - http://www.privacyrights.org/
- Privacy International - http://www.privacyinternational.org/