Two sets of emails obtained by Al Jazeera America under a Freedom of Information Act request suggest that Google's cooperation with the National Security Agency (NSA) may have been less coerced than the company has let on.. The emails date back to June 2012 and chronicle communications between NSA director General Keith Alexander and Google executives Eric Schmidt and Sergey Brin. The link for this article located at Computer World is no longer available. . Revealed emails from June 2012 highlight significant collaboration between Google and the NSA, raising serious concerns about privacy, trust, and ethical tech practices. Google NSA, Data Privacy, Email Revelations. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Here's an unhappy prediction: The explosion of spam-blocking technology could herald the death of much legitimate e-mail. I wrote about patents relating to this technology, known as challenge-response technology, last week. Basically, when your mailbox is protected by a challenge-response . . . . Here's an unhappy prediction: The explosion of spam-blocking technology could herald the death of much legitimate e-mail. I wrote about patents relating to this technology, known as challenge-response technology, last week. Basically, when your mailbox is protected by a challenge-response system, people who try to contact you will be greeted with a response saying something like "click on this link to deliver this message" or "type in the word you see in the box above." The idea is to block increasingly obnoxious spam bots but still let actual humans get in touch with you. In theory, well-designed challenge-response utilities won't challenge mail from known correspondents or mail that you've actually asked to receive. Unfortunately, many current challenge-response systems are poorly designed, which could wreak havoc on mailing lists and other legitimate communications. This could make e-mail far less useful than it is today. . The growing adoption of phishing shields could pose risks to authentic message delivery. Explore the consequences of verification protocols.. Spam Control, Email Technology, Challenge-Response, Email Security, Communication Issues. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
When Josh Tinnin tried to send e-mail to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission this month, he received an unwelcome surprise: He couldn't. Tinnin's message to the FTC bounced back because the agency subscribes to a blacklisting service designed to limit . . . . When Josh Tinnin tried to send e-mail to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission this month, he received an unwelcome surprise: He couldn't. Tinnin's message to the FTC bounced back because the agency subscribes to a blacklisting service designed to limit the amount of spam making its way into the agency's in-boxes. SBC Pacific Bell, Tinnin's Internet service provider, appeared on the blacklist as a haven for senders of junk e-mail. "I didn't know that the government was using blacklists," said Tinnin, who lives in Fremont, Calif. "That was surprising." The link for this article located at news.com is no longer available. . When Josh Tinnin tried to send e-mail to the U.S. Federal Trade Commission this month, he received a. tinnin, tried, e-mail, federal, trade, commission, month, received. . Anthony Pell
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