When you use the Internet, a certain record of your activities is invariably created and - at least for a short time - retained by your Internet Service Provider. For example, when you establish an account with your ISP - whether it is AOL, Comcast, Verizon, Time-Warner, or any of thousands of ISPs you generally provide the ISP with your name, address, telephone number, and if it is a paid service, some form of payment - credit card, bank account, etc. The ISP will typically retain this account information, and will also keep records that associate this account information with any accounts that you create. Thus, while you think you are so clever creating the online persona "cyber-stud" the ISP knows that you are really a twenty nine year old permanent undergraduate engineering student living at home in your mother's basement. . This "real world" account information - associating a cyber persona with a real identity - is a gold mine for marketers, law enforcement agencies and the intelligence community, as they want to know who their customers or the users of online services really are. This information can be used for good or for evil. If there is an online pedophile or terrorist, one certainly wants the police to have the ability to, in close-to-real-time when necessary, be able to learn who these people are, and physically where they are as well. One would think that the police would need a subpoena or court order for this information, right? Well, not exactly. The link for this article located at is no longer available. . Digital footprints can expose personal data, merging online behaviors with real-life identities; this raises significant issues for privacy and safety in internet usage.. Access Logs, Data Retention, Internet Privacy. . Brittany Day
Apache comes with built-in mechanisms for logging activity on your server. In this series of articles, I'll talk about the standard way that Apache writes log files, and some of the tricks for getting more useful information and statistics out of . . . . Apache comes with built-in mechanisms for logging activity on your server. In this series of articles, I'll talk about the standard way that Apache writes log files, and some of the tricks for getting more useful information and statistics out of your server. This week we'll talk about the information that appears in your transfer log, and what it all means. The link for this article located at ApacheToday is no longer available. . Dive into the realm of Apache logging to grasp how to leverage access_log effectively for optimal server oversight.. Apache Logging, Access Logs, Server Activity, Web Management. . Anthony Pell
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