Whowatch is an console, interactive users and process monitoring tool.It displays information about the users currently logged on to the machine, in real-time. Besides standard informations (login name, tty,host, user. The link for this article located at ubuntugeek is no longer available. . Explore Whowatch, a cutting-edge tool for real-time tracking of user logins and active processes, providing essential insights for system management and security. User Activity Tracking, System Monitoring, Interactive Monitoring. . Bill Locke
Rootsh is a shell that logs everything a root user sees on his terminal. This is useful if you have more than one system administrator for a server and you want a record of exactly what any given user does. Despite the fact that the latest rootsh release was in March 2005, it still does its job great. . The link for this article located at Linux.com is no longer available. . Uncover the capabilities of Rootsh Terminal Logger in streamlining the supervision of root user actions.. Rootsh Terminal Logger, Effective Administrator Monitoring, User Activity Logging. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
I’ve been spending a little too much time thinking about snooping lately. Actually, I’ve been thinking about snooping in all its various guises: personal, corporate, government, and extra-governmental. I’ve never been a big fan, really, even when my duties have required me to snoop. As an ex-corporate guy, my personal expectations of privacy in the workplace are what you’d expect: Never send an email you wouldn’t want to see on the front page. Seven-plus years in a Fortune 100 shop left me with a healthy dose of paranoia, and a strong aversion to sending anything of personal value via email or IM. I encrypt most of what I send from home, twitch when I’m riding wireless networks, and look over my shoulder as I type. . Thus, it's been interesting this year to see my peers wrestling with the double-edged sword of monitoring users' online behavior. We all work at private schools, and rely on varying degrees of traffic control, filtering, and/or monitoring to keep our networks running in-bounds. By and large, we lean heavily toward support of civil liberties and privacy advocacy; all of our institutions have robust privacy policies that are generally much nicer than corporate boilerplate. Many of our online and offline discussions have dealt with the degree of monitoring needed to keep our constituencies safe from outsiders (and, arguably, from themselves). The link for this article located at Dark Reading is no longer available. . Thus, it's been interesting this year to see my peers wrestling with the double-edged sword of monit. spending, little, thinking, about, snooping, lately, actually. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Hi-tech TV recording service TiVo has been attacked by a leading US privacy group. The Privacy Foundation claims TiVo covertly collects information about users' habits, despite promising not to do so. TiVo has denied the allegation, saying any data recorded is . . . . Hi-tech TV recording service TiVo has been attacked by a leading US privacy group. The Privacy Foundation claims TiVo covertly collects information about users' habits, despite promising not to do so. TiVo has denied the allegation, saying any data recorded is anonymous. The service, which was launched last year, gives users the ability to pause live television and record entire series in a single action. The Privacy Foundation claims TiVo gathers valuable market research data via an automatic daily phone call the device makes to company headquarters. The link for this article located at Ananova is no longer available. . Consumer advocacy group claims that TiVo secretly gathers user information in violation of their assurances. The company firmly rejects these allegations as it faces increased examination.. Hi-Tech Service, User Behavior, Data Privacy, Streaming Service, Privacy Concerns. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
My favorite trade mag has a new look. Here's a good (albeit, short) article on network security and privacy. "The Internet is a powerful tool that promises its users many exciting possibilities, including unprecedented access to a vast expanse . . . . My favorite trade mag has a new look. Here's a good (albeit, short) article on network security and privacy. "The Internet is a powerful tool that promises its users many exciting possibilities, including unprecedented access to a vast expanse of information. Tacked onto that promise as a sort of afterthought is the realization that the Internet can acquire quite a bit of information about its users. Recent revelations about how companies like DoubleClick and Yahoo! have used things like clickstream data and cookies to glean very specific information about individual users have caused an increasingly tumultuous stir over the issue of privacy on the Internet. " The link for this article located at Network Magazine is no longer available. . In the digital era, internet privacy and network security are vital as online threats surge. Users must understand data rights and adopt measures to safeguard themselves. Internet Privacy, Data Protection, Network Security, User Monitoring. . Anthony Pell
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