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Saturday, December 14, 2002 |
Slashdot | Your Rights Online - SBC-Yahoo Partnership Cuts User Privacy. simeonbeta2 writes "The San Francisco Chronicle is running a story about Pac Bell's dsl partnership with Yahoo. Initially touted as a new service, Pac Bell is apparently now mailing existing dsl customers to urge them to install additional client software that will enable 'incredible new features and services'. While SBC's privacy policy is not excessively intrusive, use of the new software is covered by Yahoo's privacy policy, which is just a bit more Orwellian." --- The story's a little overblown - Yahoo's privacy policy reads that way because they offer financial services and the like, where they may well need financial information from you to provide the service. The reporter needed to investigate this new software DSL users are being asked to install, and find out what sort of user tracking it enables. [Privacy Digest]
11:44:39 AM
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Turn about is fair play? Discuss
Keeping Track of John Poindexter. Online pranksters have turned the tables on the man behind the government's controversial Total Information Awareness effort. They are posting his personal information on hundreds of sites. By Paul Boutin. [Wired News]
11:36:28 AM
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New Web-based Wi-Fi discussion forum: In conjunction with the launch of my book on wireless networking (see upper left of this page), my co-author and I have launched a discussion forum for Wi-Fi issues, as well as issues from the book. I've been longing to set up a simple threaded forum for quite a while, and finally found the right package and approach. Join us! [80211b News]
11:29:29 AM
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English countryside doing it for themselves: This story by Ben Hammersley, written in October for the Guardian (but missed by me), tells of how rural areas in England are prompting entrepreneurial efforts, often involving Wi-Fi, to bring high-speed connections to areas that British Telecom says are too far below their radar. In Wales, a community effort inspired by Dave Hughes is rapidly transforming the picture of connectivity, and the secondary effects are apparently already cropping up. What better way to unite people spread out geographically for common cause than access? [80211b News]
9:33:14 AM
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Update - Fire As mentioned the other day, (scroll down for all you other folks), I downloaded this to give it a whirl. Well it whirled right into the trash this morning. The interface is crappy, and the overall working isn't very intuitive. I had to keep clicking on various things to see if anyone was on-line, as there were no audio or visual indicators that someone on my lists had come on-line.
9:18:09 AM
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© Copyright 2002 Paul W. Swansen.
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