The Firearms Forum - Gun Community  
TheFirearmsForum.com
FOUNDED: February 9, 2001
If you prefer to make a donation by check,
send an email to Support for the mailing address.

Go Back   The Firearms Forum - Gun Community > Member Discussions > General Discussion

Notices


Reply
 
Thread Tools
Old 03-02-2012, 07:20 PM   #1
mjp28
Advanced Senior Member
 
mjp28's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: anytown, OHIO
Contributor
Posts: 3,203
Default Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie

If you're not committing fraud, you're not required to give your correct name to Google or anyone else.

By Kevin Fogarty, ITworld Mar 1, 2012 7:00 pm

http://www.pcworld.com/article/25112...ivacy_lie.html

Do you know what the worst thing is about Google's new no-privacy policy and attempt to collect data about everything you do online in one place no matter where you do it or on what site?

You have no choice but to go along with it, if you want to find the information you're looking for. Intrusiveness is one thing, intrusiveness to which it's impossible to say 'No' is another. Especially when Twitter and the other services you use online are being just as intrusive.

If you use the Internet at all it's very hard to avoid Google, either searching it directly or using it indirectly as the embedded search engine on someone else's site. And that doesn’t even include Google Apps, which is the only reason some people ever log in to Google.

Even those so offended by Google's decision to consolidate all the tracking data it keeps in Picasa, Gmail, Search and all its other services into a single package and appalled by its decision to sell that information, much of which customers didn' t know Google was saving, have no choice but to use Google some of the time.

Of course, they don't have to log in, so Google would be limited in the degree to which it could invade their privacy.

It wouldn't have their names and addresses, phone numbers and long-term search history.

It would just have one cookie that could identify the user's browser and associate that individual with a list of Web pages, search queries and other activities in which he or she has engaged while being tracked by Google (which is always).


In its own outreach plan to the media today, the day its new privacy invasions are set to start, Google spokespeople tried to spin the truth by making it seem less intrusive to be tracked less completely by Google than might otherwise be the case.

As if simply following you around all day long, taking surreptitious pictures, drawing maps of your wanderings and selling all that information about you to people eager to use it to manipulate and persuade you isn't bad enough to qualify as a stalker.

It is, but it's the Lite version of Google's efforts to track you.

There are bits of software, special settings on your browser and at Google you can use to minimize the amount of data Google tracks on you. Some work well, some don't, some are too much of a pain to worry about.

They'll all conceal different portions of your personal data, or erase it, or anonymize it to avoid identifying you, personally, with all the searches on SuperHotMoms.com or TickleYouWithAFeather.org.

They all require some extra work, some additional software running with your browser, some time spent changing the configuration of your browser so it automatically deletes all your tracking cookies every time you shut it down.

What can you do if you don't want to waste time on freeware or changing the setup of your browser in ways you may not understand?

You can lie.

Lie to Google. Lie to Yahoo and Bing and Facebook and Twitter and any other sites that not only want to track you but won't even do their most basic mob – showing you content – without taking down information you would indignantly refuse if you were asked by the corn-dog vendor at the carnival, clerk at the car-wash or zombie behind the counter at a convenience store that accepts only cash.

Just lie.

If you have to enter a name, enter a name that is not your own.

Every time a site pops up a window asking for your birthday, pick one that's not even in the same decade as yours (make sure you're still claiming to be over 21 so the site doesn't turn you away).

When a site asks you to open an account, use a differerent login name and address than you'd need to buy something. Tell Google you live in Seattle; tell Bing you live in San Jose. Tell Twitter you live on a different planet.

It won't save you from having all the searches you run or sites you visit tracked. It won't assign a different IP address to your browsing data to make you harder to find,

It won't erase any of your past history; it won't add any history that's less embarrassing.

What it will do is create a fictional, named persona to whom some of your searches and browsing can be attributed.


It will break up the global picture of all your activities online into smaller chunks so no single vendor has the whole picture of everything you do.

They don't have the right to demand that, anyway. They ask because they know you'll usually go along with it, not because you're obligated to tell them.

The only time you're obligated to tell the truth is when you're buying something and the credit-card has to be yours, or signing up for a service that depends on using your correct identity – at the DMV or your bank, for example.

Don't make all the names random. Make up a couple of fake personas and use them consistently so you don't waste time and get frustrated while filling out online forms. Just paste the answers in and get on with your business.

It's not a crime; it's not an ethical violation. It's not even particularly rude, considering how intimate, complete and unwanted a profile Google is building of you.

Protect yourself a little without hurting anyone; be someone else for a while.

If it confuses anyone trying to keep track of you online, it serves them right. No one has the right to follow you all the time without your consent. No one has the right to know everything you do. No one has the right to insist you always tell the truth when they're asking intrusive, manipulative questions without answers to which they won't give you the free service they promised when you hit their site in the first place.

And, with enough fake information in their databases, maybe Google and the rest of the identity-data thieves will tone down their own demands for information you wouldn't normally give your best friend, let alone a disembodied representation of the advertising world.


It's impossible to hurt the feelings of a web site.

-->
mjp28 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-02-2012, 07:24 PM   #2
BETH
Advanced Senior Member
 
BETH's Avatar
 
Join Date: Jul 2009
Location: naugatuck,Ct.
Contributor
Posts: 6,686
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Why not just delete google
BETH is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-02-2012, 07:27 PM   #3
jack404
Former Guest
 
Join Date: Jan 2010
Location: Australia
Contributor
Posts: 17,622
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

i'd rather delete the mutts who allowed private companies these powers in return for sharing what they get with the gooberment
jack404 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-02-2012, 07:37 PM   #4
mjp28
Advanced Senior Member
 
mjp28's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: anytown, OHIO
Contributor
Posts: 3,203
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Quote:
Originally Posted by BETH View Post
Why not just delete google
Yes some people might just quit using google but most will keep on using it (it's so easy and a habit, most even here will still use it)

And it's more than just google, to cut down on more traceable data, if you want.....

......Lie to Google. Lie to Yahoo and Bing and Facebook and Twitter and any other sites that not only want to track you but won't even do their most basic mob – showing you content – without taking down information you would indignantly refuse if you were asked by the corn-dog vendor at the carnival, clerk at the car-wash or zombie behind the counter at a convenience store that accepts only cash.

Just lie.

If you have to enter a name, enter a name that is not your own.

Every time a site pops up a window asking for your birthday, pick one that's not even in the same decade as yours (make sure you're still claiming to be over 21 so the site doesn't turn you away).......


And I NEVER use my first and last name in any email or other addresses.
mjp28 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-02-2012, 08:00 PM   #5
BlackEagle
Advanced Senior Member
 
BlackEagle's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 3,248
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Thanks for the post mjp28.
BlackEagle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-02-2012, 08:25 PM   #6
cpttango30
Adnanced Senior Member
 
Posts: n/a
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Google can have what ever they want from me even my kids. Google is great. I love google.

They can track me all they want. It bring better products to me. My gmail gets ZERO SPAM in my inbox it all goes directly to my SPAM folder. Plus Google is ULTRA supportive of EDUCATION. They GIVE just about every single product they have to schools for FREE or so little it is just like getting it free. Plus like I have said before, they really take care of their employees. If they weren't In CA I would so apply for a job with them. Hell I would sweep the floors just to say I worked for google.
  Reply With Quote
Old 03-02-2012, 08:39 PM   #7
norahc
Advanced Senior Member
 
norahc's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: Small town 150 miles from Canada where 90% of population speaks Spanish.
Posts: 1,826
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

While I don't like how much information companies are allowed to keep on individuals, I will give Google a lot of credit and respect in that at least they are upfront about what they do and collect. Their support for Open Source Software also impresses me, along with their litigation history.

For these reasons, and the ones that cpttango30 mentioned, I use a lot of Google products. Chrome, Chromium, GMail, GDocs, Google Voice, Android, etc...
__________________
Murphy was an optimist.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Spokane Councilman Steve Salvatori
Some battles are fought for principle and some battles are fought for dollars. When you fight for principles you fight until hell freezes over and then you fight on the ice.
Quote:
Originally Posted by RunningOnMT View Post
Every tyranny begins with a good excuse.
norahc is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-03-2012, 04:41 PM   #8
mjp28
Advanced Senior Member
 
mjp28's Avatar
 
Join Date: Dec 2011
Location: anytown, OHIO
Contributor
Posts: 3,203
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Quote:
Originally Posted by cpttango30 View Post
Google can have what ever they want from me even my kids. Google is great. I love google.
I also like Google in fact I have a Google toolbar, nice features, it's just important to watch all of your other data everywhere for example I use several email addresses for different "levels" by importance online.

Banking, important other email have one box I never give out to casual sites...ever! Higher levels of user names and passwords.

Then I have a few other sites for other purposes. My facebook has all bogus name and numbers for one, I can go on but I don't care for the world to have access to my information (I can em my ID to whom I want).

As a good policy of internet and ID theft and other protection "don't put all your eggs in one email basket".

Last edited by mjp28; 03-03-2012 at 04:42 PM..
mjp28 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2012, 02:59 PM   #9
BlackEagle
Advanced Senior Member
 
BlackEagle's Avatar
 
Join Date: Nov 2011
Location: UK
Posts: 3,248
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Wise words mjp.
BlackEagle is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 03-04-2012, 04:20 PM   #10
raven818
Advanced Senior Member
 
raven818's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2011
Location: Jax, Fl.
Contributor
Posts: 4,439
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

Quote:
Some work well, some don't, some are too much of a pain to worry about.
And that's why they will succeed. All in all, folks are just to lazy to do what needs to be done to cut down on the invasion. Or, I like my browser.
__________________
Firearms and Salt Water Fishing
Retired 42 Years LEO
raven818 is offline   Reply With Quote
Old 08-29-2012, 11:58 PM   #11
alexmoose1986
Member
 
Join Date: Aug 2012
Posts: 1
Default Re: Protect Your Online Privacy: Lie? Yes it can help. (PCWorld)

It is necessary to protect your online data because, nowadays a number of group of cyber criminals or computer hackers works for hacking the confidential data of the innocent computer users. They may hack your confidential data. So you should enhance the security mechanism of computer system and prevent your data from hackers. For this purpose you can use an advanced Privacy sentinal software which helps you to protect your online data and boost the security mechanism of your computer system.

Follow these below tips to secure your online privacy :

Boost your computer's security settings
Avoid unsecure download*or install
Keeps your firewall always on
keeps your Antivirus always update

For more information visit: privacysentinelreview.com
alexmoose1986 is offline   Reply With Quote
Reply

Thread Tools

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

BB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off

Forum Jump


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 07:07 AM.

STILL SEARCHING FOR SOMETHING? TRY THE TFF "GOOGLE" SEARCH ENGINE BELOW!
Google

Copyright ©2002 - 2013, TheFirearmsForum.Com