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It's all clutter
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08/04/2013 06:11:31
 
 
À
07/04/2013 19:29:02
Information générale
Forum:
Level Extreme
Catégorie:
Autre
Divers
Thread ID:
01569748
Message ID:
01570371
Vues:
59
>>>>Clauses b) and c) place no restrictions on what MS may do. For example, all MS has to do is decide they need to scan your communications to protect their, or their customers' properties and/or rights (whatever they decide that to mean). You have no way to deny that access, short of not using the software, or disconnecting from the Internet.
>>
>>It's a common-enough form similar to when you sign up for practically anything. I agree it could be tightened up to refer to requests by authorities or court orders, but it's a free service and companies reasonably have a duty to limit their exposure.
>
>Not sure what you mean here - the text is from the extended privacy statement for Windows 8, which is free neither as in libre nor as in beer.
>
>
>>>>an interesting read at http://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2012/02/im-being-followed-how-google-151-and-104-other-companies-151-are-tracking-me-on-the-web/253758/
>>
>>The first paragraph immediately is wrong thanks to Ghostery. FWIW Ghostery blocked 12 trackers at your link at theatlantic.com which is more than NYTimes!
>>
>>>>Another interesting read at http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2012/03/ff_nsadatacenter/ .
>>
>>Yep. Last month a US authority figure said that most of the world's email traverses an email server in a US state at some point which gives them the right to snoop. There are different laws for European communications, but is it still European if it traverses an e-mail server in the US? What about VOIP telephone increasingly used even by copper wire phone providers? Most of that stuff also is sent in the clear and may not require a formal snooping order like a landline. Yep, we all need to assume that everything electronic lasts forever and even if it can't be snooped today it may be tomorrow. E.g. imagine if Michel were to sell UT to another company who rolls it up into an exciting new floated company who goes broke and the UT data is sold by the receiver to somebody who publishes it for advertising revenues... seems to me that's likely to be the end fate of a lot of stuff online.
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>>>>The most important thing to remember is, the Internet never forgets.
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>>Agreed.
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>>>>Remaining anonymous is NOT easy, and anyone who thinks so is a bit naive.
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>>LOL. They can track you to an internet provider/IP and email address, but neither of those needs to identify you. I've trained my kids to use disposable e-mail addresses for years and even provide domains for that purpose.
>
>Probably only a few percent of members here know about disposable e-mail addresses, Tor et al. The proportion of the population at large - miniscule, even negligible. If they had the background and inclination, yes, they could be taught. But that's not the hard part, which is the discipline to apply those techniques 24/7/365.25 and never screw up even once.

Hi Al

what is a disposable email address ?
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