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{ Monthly Archives } November 2008

There Is No Privacy #1: Snooping Browsing History through HTML

Unless you have installed a couple of specific firefox extensions to protect yourself, the owners of any website you visit can tell whether you have visited any other website. It has been known since 2006 that is it possible for any website to query whether you have visited any of a list of other websites […]

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Schneier (wrong) on censorship

Security guru (and potential CISO for the Obama Administration) Bruce Schneier recently blogged about his thoughts on the Internet censorship methods used in the United Arab Emirates: The government of the United Arab Emirates (UAE) pervasively filters Web sites that contain pornography or relate to alcohol and drug use, gay and lesbian issues, or online […]

Narus: Security through Surveillance

In 2006, an AT&T engineer named Mark Klein revealed a secret room inside a major Internet hub that was only accessible to engineers with NSA security clearance. His revelation was written up in the New York Times as part of its larger coverage of NSA wiretapping of domestic communications. Among the documents revealed by Klein […]

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Best Western Data Breach as Shell Game

On August 26, 2008, the Sunday Herald reported that a hacker had broken into the Best Western reservations system and stolen personal and financial data about eight million Best Western customers, including credit card numbers. According to the report, the thief had installed a virus on the machine of an employee of a local hotel […]

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