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Famed Hacker Shows You How to Go Invisible Online


tao

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If you’re like me, one of the first things you do in the morning is check your email. And, if you’re like me, you also wonder who else has read your email. That’s not a paranoid concern. If you use a web-based email service such as Gmail or Outlook 365, the answer is kind of obvious and frightening.

 

Even if you delete an email the moment you read it on your computer or mobile phone, that doesn’t necessarily erase the content. There’s still a copy of it somewhere. Web mail is cloud-based, so in order to be able to access it from any device anywhere, at any time, there have to be redundant copies. If you use Gmail, for example, a copy of every email sent and received through your Gmail account is retained on various servers worldwide at Google. This is also true if you use email systems provided by Yahoo, Apple, AT&T, Comcast, Microsoft, or even your workplace. Any emails you send can also be inspected, at any time, by the hosting company. Allegedly this is to filter out malware, but the reality is that third parties can and do access our emails for other, more sinister and self-serving, reasons.

 

While most of us may tolerate having our emails scanned for malware, and perhaps some of us tolerate scanning for advertising purposes, the idea of third parties reading our correspondence and acting on specific contents found within specific emails is downright disturbing.

 

The least you can do is make it much harder for them to do so.

 

Please read the rest of the article < here >.

 

 

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Let me get this right.  The hacker that was caught because he couldn't make himself invisible is now going to tell us how to become invisible.  I think he has the wrong credentials to be doing that.  Would you ask a bank robber who was caught how to rob a bank and not get caught?  I wouldn't.

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On 2/26/2017 at 4:50 AM, straycat19 said:

Let me get this right.  The hacker that was caught because he couldn't make himself invisible is now going to tell us how to become invisible.  I think he has the wrong credentials to be doing that.  Would you ask a bank robber who was caught how to rob a bank and not get caught?  I wouldn't.

Yes.  I'd listen to him and hear what he has to say. There is nothing to lose (in my opinion).

There are scores of examples in Science where the ultimate success depended upon many previous failures.

 

But, I do understand your point of view.  ;)

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