PrivacyGroup: Difference between revisions

From Sidiprojects Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
Line 11: Line 11:


== News ==
== News ==
* [http://www.googletransparencyproject.org/articles/googles-evangelist Google and government, via the Google Transparency Project. Google lobbies to influence policy to reduce consumer privacy. This article also discusses the NSA-Google relationship.] <span style="color:red">NEW</span>
* [http://www.googletransparencyproject.org/articles/googles-evangelist Google and government, via the Google Transparency Project. Google lobbies to influence policy to reduce consumer privacy. This article also discusses the NSA-Google relationship.]  
* [http://motherboard.vice.com/read/warrant-canary-for-activist-email-service-riseup-seemingly-expires <b>Riseup warrant canary expires, Riseup is alerted, but the canary is not updated.</b>] <span style="color:red">NEW</span>
* [http://motherboard.vice.com/read/warrant-canary-for-activist-email-service-riseup-seemingly-expires <b>Riseup warrant canary expires, Riseup is alerted, but the canary is not updated.</b>]  
* [http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cyber-congress-idUSKBN13P2ER FBI now can compromise computers outside the jurisdiction of the court issuing the warrant, including overseas.]  <span style="color:red">NEW</span>
* [http://www.reuters.com/article/us-usa-cyber-congress-idUSKBN13P2ER FBI now can compromise computers outside the jurisdiction of the court issuing the warrant, including overseas.]   
* Trump pick for CIA head, Mike Pompeo, [[Media:pompeo_surveillance.pdf|says in the Wall Street Journal]] that "the use of strong encryption in personal communications may itself be a red flag" that a person is a terrorist. <span style="color:red">NEW</span>
* Trump pick for CIA head, Mike Pompeo, [[Media:pompeo_surveillance.pdf|says in the Wall Street Journal]] that "the use of strong encryption in personal communications may itself be a red flag" that a person is a terrorist.
* [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/nov/19/extreme-surveillance-becomes-uk-law-with-barely-a-whimper Extreme surevillance via "Snooper's Charter" is now law in the UK]. Among other things, requires internet providers to log websites that their customers connect to. <span style="color:red">NEW</span>
* [https://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/nov/19/extreme-surveillance-becomes-uk-law-with-barely-a-whimper Extreme surevillance via "Snooper's Charter" is now law in the UK]. Among other things, requires internet providers to log websites that their customers connect to.  
* [http://www.theverge.com/2016/10/27/13428976/fcc-passes-isp-privacy-rules FCC requires customer opt-in for ISPs to share "sensitive data", opt-out for "other" data. Previously there was no regulation)]
* [http://www.theverge.com/2016/10/27/13428976/fcc-passes-isp-privacy-rules FCC requires customer opt-in for ISPs to share "sensitive data", opt-out for "other" data. Previously there was no regulation)]
* [http://blogs.wsj.com/wtk/ be wary of dictionary sites (dictionary.com, merriam-webster.com). They have high concentrations of trackers] -- Part of the "What they Know" coverage in the Wall Street Journal.
* [http://blogs.wsj.com/wtk/ be wary of dictionary sites (dictionary.com, merriam-webster.com). They have high concentrations of trackers] -- Part of the "What they Know" coverage in the Wall Street Journal.

Revision as of 20:35, 5 January 2017

This page is an effort to maintain an updated collection of important work on privacy. Recommend stuff from this page? Link to us!

Calendar

Events in this calendar are to privacy-related events. Click an event for more details, and links. <EventCalendar> namespace = PrivacyGroup_Event aspectratio = 1.35 </EventCalendar>

News

Tools help

People often tell me they are unsure about which privacy-enhancing technologies to use, and how to set them up. Here are some suggestions.

operating systems

browsers

  • Tor -- (A new version was released the week of 13 Nov). I suggest subscribing to the RSS feed of the blog of the Tor project to be sure you stay up to date with the hardened version. The hardened version includes AddressSanitizer (ASan) to detect memory corruption.
  • Icecat -- It's like Firefox, but better. Does not support DRM with encrypted media extension technology, unlike Firefox.

browser tools

these all work with Icecat, or Firefox. They may also work with other FF variants; I haven't checked.

  • Random Agent Spoofer (blocks a variety of fingerprinting attacks)
  • RequestPolicy (By Justin Samuel and Beichuan Zhang, of University of Arizona!)
  • NoScript
  • PrivacyBadger (EFF)
  • Self-Destructing Cookies
  • HTTPS Everywhere (EFF)
  • BetterPrivacy (removes LSO's -- supercookies -- which survive normal cleaning of cookie cache)
  • decentraleyes - runs CDN scripts locally, rather than using remote CDNs (which is trackable)
  • Privacy Settings (the plugin) -- Gives quick access to useful privacy settings in the browser, with toggle switches. NEW
  • Update Scanner -- Useful for watching privacy policies for changes (since that is your obligation, as a continuing user of the site. Often such changes are not highlighted; only a new version is posted). NEW

testing for problems

facial recognition

other tools

  • Get an RSS feed reader to keep up to date on privacy-related sites. For example *cough* subscribe to the PrivacyGroup's feed (It's good to use a secure RSS reader. For mobile there is Courier from The Guardian Project).
  • Youtube-dl -- Downloads a variety of streaming formats -- not just for youtube! Can be used with torify (see below) to anonymously view streaming video/audio that otherwise compromises privacy (e.g., flash). Note the version in packages is often not up to date--install the latest with pip to get a version that actually works.
  • Torify -- A SOCKS proxy to the Tor network, and a wrapper to use it, so you can e.g. look up GPG keys, or perform WHOIS queries, anonymously.
  • Get a GPG key
  • installing the latest GPG
  • secure SSH

Other Sites with Tools for Protecting Your Digital Rights

Tools for Making Consent to Privacy Policies More Informed

Why care about privacy?

Giving up privacy

How universities can help

Videos

Miscellaneous

Privacy theme music!