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Mother tongue: English Joined: March 28, 2004 Location: Malaysia
RE: Do you need privacy?
Originally written by Derek Thornton on July 13, 2009 8:32 PM
No, the best strategy is to take the bits up to the top of a tall building and let the wind distribute them over several square kilometers.
With today's tendency for tall buildings to be highly wired with CCTVs, you risk every camera in the city trained on you through face recognition, tracking your every move all over town as a suspicious character possibly up to no good. Your ID would be checked through computerized comparison of your face, and then your email, computer access, banking records, vehicle movement, phone calls, travel pattern, contacts, and down to your shopping and spending habits would be automatically tracked, tabulated and filed for cross-reference. You are now targeted for automatic surveillance. Welcome to the wired world.
Mother tongue: English Posts: 1 Joined: January 3, 2009 Location: United Arab Emirates
RE: Do you need privacy?
Who doesn't want privacy? I honestly don't like to be an open book. I could tolerate just about anything, but one thing I can never ever tolerate is my privacy being invaded. I don't know what I'd do if I had to live in Orwell's 1984 world which, I think, we'll soon find ourselves in with the number of countries turning into police states is dramatically increasing every year.
Everyone knows it's bad to use the same password for different sites. People do it anyway because remembering different passwords is annoying. Remembering different difficult passwords is even more annoying. Eric Thompson, the founder of AccessData, a technology forensics company that makes password-guessing software, says that most passwords follow a pattern. First, people choose a readable word as a base for the password—not necessarily something in Webster's but something that is pronounceable in English. Then, when pressed to add a numeral or symbol to make the password more secure, most people add a 1 or ! to the end of that word. Thompson's software, which uses a "brute force" technique that tries thousands of passwords until it guesses yours correctly, can easily suss out such common passwords. When it incorporates your computer's Web history in its algorithm—all your ramblings on Twitter, Facebook, and elsewhere—Thompson's software can come up with a list of passwords that is highly likely to include yours. (He doesn't use it for nefarious ends; AccessData usually guesses passwords under the direction of a court order, for military purposes, or when companies get locked out of their own systems—"systems administrator gets hit by a bus on the way to work," Thompson says by way of example.) ...
In Schneier's comment section, I found a foolproof technique to create passwords that are near-impossible to crack yet easy to remember. Even better, it'll take just five minutes of your time. Ready?
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