| From: Giles Orr <[email protected]>

| I use Google Calendar, which is brilliant AND co-ordinates with my
| phone.  It also gives my entire life schedule to Google, totally
| compromising my privacy.  I suspect you're being more reasonable and
| avoiding this route: more power to you.  Sadly, all calendars in my
| life are now measured by the great - but privacy destroying - Google
| Calendar, and all others have failed.  <sigh>

"You have zero privacy anyway. Get over it." Scott McNealy 1999

"The future is already here -- it's just not very evenly
distributed" William Gibson 1993

I dispair of privacy but am fighting a rear-guard action.  iOS and
Android leak stuff like crazy, but what's the mobile alternative?

Now desktops are copying this.  And not just browsers.  Windows 10
appears as bad as Android and iOS.  Simple example: Microsoft gets
information about all the programs you run and that cannot be turned
off (it could be firewalled surely).  Your OS as an Advanced
Persistent Threat.

Many, but not all, of these leaks come with advantages to the user.
For example, Cortana, Siri, and Google Now(?) may be fun but they are
always listening to you and sending something home.  Google (and
other) search have to send the queries upstream.

If I remember correctly, on a recent update, I had to give Google
Slides general permission to use the microphone.  Huh?

Our legal system doesn't provide tools and norms to limit the damage.
We need mandated and enforce limitations on information flows within
organizations as well as between organizations.  This is going to be
hard since Big Data is such a thing.  And specifict consent should be
required.

I really don't like it that our desktops are becoming treacherous
devices, following our smartphones.
---
Talk Mailing List
[email protected]
http://gtalug.org/mailman/listinfo/talk

Reply via email to