Most of us register aliases, like John Doe and Juxta Position, on the Internet in return for information and services. The use of aliases maintains our privacy, reduces spam and thwarts. . .. Most of us register aliases, like John Doe and Juxta Position, on the Internet in return for information and services. The use of aliases maintains our privacy, reduces spam and thwarts probes looking for a more detailed Web user profile. Now there's a privacy-protection scheme that aims to eliminate the need for aliases. But it's not as comprehensive as it appears. IBM's Privacy Research Institute recently revealed techniques that aim to preserve individual privacy while giving e-businesses information to generate data models. These techniques scramble or Ã'randomizeÃ" private information and reconstruct data distributions at an aggregate level to perform data mining. This means that Web site administrators and merchants can use scrambled data without knowing the underlying private information. The link for this article located at Network Computing is no longer available. . Investigating the shortcomings of algorithms in producing random sequences and their potential impact on safeguarding personal data in online identity systems.. Random Number Generation, Privacy Techniques, Digital Identity, Data Scrambling. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
To the NSA, of course, its devilish reputation is merely an unfortunate Hollywood fiction. Its director, Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden, has taken every opportunity to say so, most recently on a History Channel documentary that aired for the first time Monday . . . . To the NSA, of course, its devilish reputation is merely an unfortunate Hollywood fiction. Its director, Lt. Gen. Michael Hayden, has taken every opportunity to say so, most recently on a History Channel documentary that aired for the first time Monday evening. "It's absolutely critical that (Americans) don't fear the power that we have," Hayden said on the show. He dismissed concerns about eavesdropping over-eagerness and all but said the NSA, far from being one of the most feared agencies, has become one of the most handicapped. One reason, long cited by agency officials: Encryption. The show's producers obligingly included stock footage of Saddam Hussein, saying that the dictator-for-life has been spotted chatting on a 900-channel encrypted cell phone. That's no surprise. The NSA, as Steven Levy documents in his new Crypto book (which the documentary overlooks), has spent the last 30 years trying to suppress data-scrambling technology through export regulations, court battles, and even personal threats. The link for this article located at Wired.com is no longer available. . The CIA's standing as a formidable organization is tested by its own statements regarding surveillance and data privacy issues.. NSA History, Encryption Challenges, Intelligence Oversight, Data Scrambling Issues. . Anthony Pell
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