!privacy
@links.hackliberty.orghttps://forum.hackliberty.org/t/hack-liberty-privacy-and-security-resources/24
Guides Anonymous Planet [Tor] - a community contributed online guide to anonymity written for activists, journalists, scientists, lawyers, whistle-blowers, and good people being oppressed, censored, harassed anywhere Privacy Guides [Tor] - a non-profit, socially motivated website that provides information for protecting your data security and privacy Extreme Privacy 4th Edition - Michael Bazzell has helped hundreds of celebrities, billionaires, and everyday citizens disappear completely from pu...
cross-posted from: https://links.hackliberty.org/post/2667522
Apparently some company I do business with shared my data with another corp without me knowing, then that corp who I did not know had my data was breached.
WTF?
Then the breached corp who could not competently secure the data in the first place offers victims a gratis credit monitoring services (read: offers to let yet another dodgy corp also have people’s sensitive info thus creating yet another breach point). Then the service they hired as a “benefit” to victims outsources to another corp and breach point: Cloudflare.
WTF?
So to be clear, the biggest privacy abuser on the web is being used to MitM a sensitive channel between a breach victim and a credit monitoring service who uses a configuration that blocks tor (thus neglecting data minimization and forcing data breach victims to reveal even more sensitive info to two more corporate actors, one of whom has proven to be untrustworthy with private info).
I am now waiting for someone to say “smile for the camera, you’ve been punk’d!”.
(update)
Then the lawyers representing data breach victims want you to give them your e-mail address so they can put Microsoft Outlook in the loop. WTF? The shit show of incompetence has no limit.
Are there any privacy implications of enabling it?
https://www.autoriteitpersoonsgegevens.nl/en/current/dutch-dpa-imposes-a-fine-of-290-million-euro-on-uber-because-of-transfers-of-drivers-data-to-the-us
Dutch DPA imposes a fine of 290 million euro on Uber because of transfers of drivers' data to the US.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240821013006/https://reclaimthenet.org/court-slams-geofence-warrants-as-unconstitutional-overreach
Court declares geofence warrants unconstitutional, likening them to invasive mass surveillance that undermines Fourth Amendment protections.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240820152631/https://reclaimthenet.org/report-biden-administration-rushes-digital-id-plans
Push for digital IDs ignites debates on privacy, security, and the future of online anonymity in America.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240822132343/https://reclaimthenet.org/vpns-vanish-from-brazils-app-store-as-internet-freedom-faces-unprecedented-clampdown
The removal of VPN apps and the shutdown of X in Brazil signal a troubling escalation in the country's efforts to control online access and information.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240822132113/https://reclaimthenet.org/californias-digital-plates-plan-raises-privacy-fears
The push to reintroduce GPS tracking in California's digital license plates raises alarms about privacy and unchecked surveillance.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240822131732/https://reclaimthenet.org/texas-is-sued-over-attempts-to-end-online-anonymity
Texas' age "verification law" is finding opposition.