Someday a stranger will read your e-mail, rummage through your instant messages without your permission or scan the Web sites you. Who would watch you without your permission? It might be a spouse, a girlfriend, a marketing company, a boss, a cop or a criminal. Whoever it is, they will see you in a way you never intended to be seen The link for this article located at MSNBC is no longer available. . Apprehension mounts as diverse parties encroach upon individual confidentiality without approval, ranging from partners to offenders.. Personal Privacy, Surveillance Risks, Digital Threats, Cybersecurity Awareness. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The specter of drive-by computer hackers cruising upscale Scottsdale neighborhoods to cherry-pick wireless Web systems has residents worried about a new method of privacy intrusion and identity theft. Residents of Scottsdale's Stonegate neighborhood filed a police report after their home computers were accessed by so-called "wardrivers," computer hackers who detect unprotected wireless Internet connections. . . .. The specter of drive-by computer hackers cruising upscale Scottsdale neighborhoods to cherry-pick wireless Web systems has residents worried about a new method of privacy intrusion and identity theft. Residents of Scottsdale's Stonegate neighborhood filed a police report after their home computers were accessed by so-called "wardrivers," computer hackers who detect unprotected wireless Internet connections. Wireless antennas attached to high-speed Internet cable modems allow wireless laptop computers to connect to the Web from as far as 200 feet away. The link for this article located at AZCentral.com is no longer available. . Local homeowners in Scottsdale express concerns regarding privacy and potential identity theft due to mobile hackers targeting vulnerabilities in wireless communications.. Drive-By Hackers, Wireless Networks, Privacy Issues, Network Security. . Anthony Pell
Academic institutions will likely pass up the chance to audit the federal government's Internet monitoring system, citing strict controls that would prevent an independent review, researchers said Wednesday.. . .. Academic institutions will likely pass up the chance to audit the federal government's Internet monitoring system, citing strict controls that would prevent an independent review, researchers said Wednesday. Known as "Carnivore," the FBI's e-mail monitoring system has drawn fire from electronic freedom activists who see it as an excessive intrusion on individual privacy. The link for this article located at CNN is no longer available. . Universities might decline to review the NSA's Echelon program due to stringent regulations that limit their autonomy.. Internet Monitoring, Academic Audit, Government Surveillance. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
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