We asked the same seven questions of each company. Their answers are reproduced below, with the responses sorted by the companies' names in alphabetical order. What information do you record about searches? Do you store IP addresses linked to search terms and types of searches (image vs. Web)? Weinstein: Any time a search is done on the AOL service or AOL.com, the left rail on the results page offers a list of the most recent searches conducted by that user. . . Feedback from corporations regarding the gathering of search data and privacy issues underscore their handling of user information.. Search Data Collection, Privacy Practices, User Information. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
What a total idiot I am. I never asked Web anonymizer SafeWeb exactly what they mean when they say they "collect NO logs or user data beyond what is required for performance tuning and security monitoring of our servers. Any such . . . . What a total idiot I am. I never asked Web anonymizer SafeWeb exactly what they mean when they say they "collect NO logs or user data beyond what is required for performance tuning and security monitoring of our servers. Any such data is carefully safeguarded, only analyzed statistically, and is destroyed soon thereafter." To me, 'soon thereafter' means 'during the next shift' when we're talking about a company that sells anonymity. And that's what I pretty well expected. And 'soon thereafter' is all you'll find in the company's privacy statement. . Diving deep into the ambiguous data protocols of SafeWeb, the online privacy shield. What does the term 'zero logs' truly signify?. Data Privacy, SafeWeb, Online Anonymity, Privacy Practices. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The government should examine its own privacy practices before pointing a finger at the commercial sector, a report published Monday said. "The Federal government is the largest collector and user of citizens' personal and private information," said Jim Harper, operator . . . . The government should examine its own privacy practices before pointing a finger at the commercial sector, a report published Monday said. "The Federal government is the largest collector and user of citizens' personal and private information," said Jim Harper, operator of Privacilla.org. "It's hard enough to control your personal information in the commercial world -- it's impossible to protect it in the governmental world." While legislators debate information-privacy guidelines on Capitol Hill, few have criticized information sharing by government, Harper said. The link for this article located at Wired is no longer available. . Authorities should evaluate their own data protection measures prior to condemning private sector data management approaches.. Citizens' Privacy, Data Usage, Information Protection. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.