Privacy
Privacy Digest covers the items directly and indirectly impacting your privacy such as cryptography, wiretaps, Free Speech, DNA and genetic testing, and database tracking in general.

 


















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  Monday, March 12, 2007


Canada.com and Email Privacy [Michael Geist Privacy Law RSS News Feed]
10:44:46 PM    

Justice Department Report Reveals FBI Misused Patriot Act. A Justice Department audit released Friday said that the FBI used the Patriot Act improperly and unlawfully to gain information about people in the United States. Two members of the House Judiciary Committee debate the audit's conclusions. By NewsHour with Jim Lehrer. [NewsHour with Jim Lehrer Podcast | PBS]
10:41:50 PM    

Google Aids Indian Goverment Censorship.  An anonymous reader writes  "Google's Orkut has made a deal to provide IP addresses of posters of content deemed objectionable by Bombay police. They object, among others, to posts against certain Indian personalities, young women admiring Indian mobsters, and, amazingly, "anti-Indian words" (!)."  [Slashdot]
10:36:33 PM    

Spying Too Secret for the Courts. AT&T and the government tell an appeals court that the case against the telecom for allegedly helping the government spy on Americans is too secret for any court, despite the Administration's admission it did spy on Americans without warrants. [Wired News: Top Stories]
10:33:23 PM    

Government Sites Fail FOIA Rules. A study shows 79 percent of federal agencies are violating a Freedom of Information Act amendment requiring they post records online and help citizens request info over the internet. In 27B Stroke 6. Plus: States' secrecy penalties. [Wired News: Top Stories]
10:14:21 PM    

Papers with sensitive information about Connecticut residents - Social Security numbers, medical records, names, phone numbers, addresses and bank records began blowing from an Ohio landfill onto nearby homeowner Harry Evans' yard months ago.

At first he just picked up the litter - dozens of papers in all - and threw it away. But about a week ago, Evans says, he talked with his wife about the personal nature of some of the windblown papers and decided he'd had enough. He called the local media. Soon, newspaper and TV reporters descended on his home in Negley.
4:41:49 PM    

Convenience stores that check ID by swiping driver's licences could be violating privacy law, Government Services Minister Gerry Phillips said Wednesday.

The system called "We Expect ID," would see store clerks swipe licences through a lottery terminal to verify a customer's age when purchasing alcohol, cigarettes, adult magazines, lottery tickets or fireworks. The terminal will read age information from the magnetic stripe on the licence and display the person's age on the terminal.


4:38:21 PM    

Popular P2P apps could expose sensitive files, report says. Five popular peer-to-peer file-sharing applications include features that could allow users to inadverdently share sensitive files on their computers with others, according to the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office. [Computerworld Privacy News]
4:33:43 PM    

'Do the Right Thing'. Editorial: There is no greater hallmark of an IT leader than the courage it takes to do what[base ']s right, says Don Tennant. [Computerworld Privacy News]
4:32:08 PM    

Congress Targets Pretexting. Legislation would add protections against the practice of posing as another to gain personal data. [PC World: Latest Technology News]
4:22:56 PM    

Seagate Ships Super-Secure Hard Disk Drive. ASI Computer Technologies will use the automatically encrypted Momentus in a laptop. [PC World: Latest Technology News]
4:18:52 PM    

Does Free Domain Registration Promote Malware?  Easy, anonymous registration boosts sites used for spamming or hosting malicious apps, McAfee says. PC World: Latest Technology News]
4:06:37 PM    

Open Government Gets Its Week in the Sunshine.

This week is Sunshine Week - a gentle name for celebrating the serious business of uncovering secretive government practices. Taking its cue from the famous line by Justice Brandeis that "sunlight is ... the best of disinfectants", this year's Sunshine Week reflects on a year of continuing efforts to increase government visibility, and a renewed interest by the press, activists, and netizens in investigating its secrets.

Projects like our own Freedom of Information Act Lltigation for Accountable Government (FLAG) project have been working hard to use statutory tools like FOIA and the Privacy Act to uncover the misuse of technology by the state. Josh Richman's overview of FLAG's work in several of Sunday's papers highlights the work our Washington office does, from uncovering the edges of the warrantless wiretapping program, to probing the connections between the NSA and Windows Vista's development.

EFF's work monitoring Washington developments in the world of technology are helped by many other dedicated sites, like OpenCRS, which distributes the fascinating, but previously restricted, Congressional Research Service reports, and OpenSecrets, which can illustrate Washington connections that are otherwise obscure (want to know why Bill Frist was so keen on the Audio Flag? Inquire within.) Researchers at EPIC, coalition groups like Open The Government and the politicians behind H.R.1309, which seeks to update the FOIA laws to react faster to inquiries, help keep the tools of exposing government sharp and relevant.

Meanwhile, across the Net, hackers and activists have been working to extract, sift and re-present what information federal and state governments do provide in a way that ordinary citizens can use. There's now a wealth of sources to choose from, from the amazing work by the volunteer-run GovTrack.us, to the new OpenCongress that builds on GovTrack's database and more, to the many new APIs that can stitch all of this data together.

Each of this tools, like each of our organizations, builds on the others. This week, the Sunlight Foundation is sponsoring a $2000 prize for the best Web mash-up of Congressional information, as judged by EFF friends Esther Dyson, Jimmy Wales, and Craig Newmark. We look forward to seeing how far the sunlight breaks this year.

[EFF: Deep Links]
4:04:59 PM    


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