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- MD-1118
- DBB Ace
- Posts: 343
- Joined: Wed Jun 25, 2008 10:08 pm
- Location: Zombieland, USA... aka Florida
Microsoft's notorious for sending itself reports and such when you get online, supposedly in the name of \"tracking the condition of your computer and its software\". I don't know how truthful that is, but I never send them reports if given the choice. I say feck 'em, they've got millions and/or billions of other users worldwide. They're only getting as much from me as they can take, and what they do get won't tell them jack. Same goes for everything and everyone else. Telemarketers? I don't answer unless I know who it is, or unless I feel like messing with them.
Yes, Spooky, there are products and projects that do much to \"obscure\" or blur the traces or a person's Internet activities ... but the fact still remains that ALL traffic on the internet is logged and tracked, therefore the most anyone can do is make it harder to trace it.
That is the way the Internet has always been, since before people started calling it the \"Internet\".
In the end, if you've got nothing to hide, then so long as you practice safe, smart use of the Internet, you most likely have very little to fear.
Disclaimer: To anyone who argues that viewpoint as \"naive\" ... By \"safe, smart use\" I'm suggesting that people don't leave their personal data exposed to any Internet passerby. Be smart about how you protect your private info (accounts, finance info, passwords, etc ... the stuff you should be using safe, smart practices with already). If you can't understand how to safeguard your personal data ... get off the \"Internet sidewalk\".
That is the way the Internet has always been, since before people started calling it the \"Internet\".
In the end, if you've got nothing to hide, then so long as you practice safe, smart use of the Internet, you most likely have very little to fear.
Disclaimer: To anyone who argues that viewpoint as \"naive\" ... By \"safe, smart use\" I'm suggesting that people don't leave their personal data exposed to any Internet passerby. Be smart about how you protect your private info (accounts, finance info, passwords, etc ... the stuff you should be using safe, smart practices with already). If you can't understand how to safeguard your personal data ... get off the \"Internet sidewalk\".
- Krom
- DBB Database Master
- Posts: 16138
- Joined: Sun Nov 29, 1998 3:01 am
- Location: Camping the energy center. BTW, did you know you can have up to 100 characters in this location box?
- Contact:
TechPro, the goal of Tor is to obscure the IP address and the route to the host so the destination server has no idea where the original request came from. It is a distributed anonymous proxy and nothing more. This does absolutely nothing to block tracking cookies or logins if you were to use them. But if you use it, and don't accept any cookies, it is highly likely the destination server will *never* be able to tell where the original request came from.
Re:
I guess your online banking and internet transactions don't count, huh.Spidey wrote:There is no such thing as “internet privacy” never was, never will be.
Re:
Banking and other transactions are “security” issues not privacy as such.Ferno wrote:I guess your online banking and internet transactions don't count, huh.Spidey wrote:There is no such thing as “internet privacy” never was, never will be.