Posts

Inside the mind of a Millennial!

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Are you flushing you identity down the drain ?

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The New World of Digital teenagers/ screenagers

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Are you ready for the digital revolution? via Mckinsey CMO forum

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What the Internet is Doing to Our Brains (Animation)

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Lying and Hiding in the Name of Privacy - new report

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Customer Commons have presented a research paper:  Lying and Hiding in the Name of Privacy http://customercommons.org/2013/05/08/lying-and-hiding-in-the-name-of-privacy/ Abstract A large percentage of individuals employ artful dodges to avoid giving out requested personal information online when they believe at least some of that information is not required. These dodges include hiding personal details, intentionally submitting incorrect data, clicking away from sites or refusing to install phone applications. This suggests most people do not want to reveal more than they have to when all they want is to download apps, watch videos, shop or participate in social networking. Keywords :  privacy, personal data, control, invasion, convergence Download a   PDF of the paper here . They surveyed 1704 people showing that 92% of the people do something:  hide, lie, click away or refuse to install an app.. in order to control their data and create some kind of privacy.   I

Who has your Back and is protecting your data?

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Electronic Freedom Foundation (EFF)   has recently released   a new report   about which companies protect their users' digital data/ identities. Download the complete   Who Has Your Back? 2013   report as   a PDF from here. Executive Summary When you use the Internet, you entrust your conversations, thoughts, experiences, locations, photos, and more to companies like Google, AT&T and Facebook. But what do these companies do when the government demands your private information? Do they stand with you? Do they let you know what’s going on? In this annual report, the Electronic Frontier Foundation examined the policies of major Internet companies — including ISPs, email providers, cloud storage providers, location-based services, blogging platforms, and social networking sites — to assess whether they publicly commit to standing with users when the government seeks access to user data. The purpose of this report is to incentivize companies to be transparent about how da