Although this is not directly related to hobbying, having yahoo monitoring one's online habits and personal information serves no good for hobbyists.
I have posted a similar message in the 3 California boards. Since SBC has a big presence in many states, I decided to repost this in the National board.
It doesn't work properly with TER. I wrote TER but got no response. Possiblly a cookie problem.
Anonymize will *not* protect you from your ISP, SBC (PacBell's parent). Your computer sends its url requests first to the ISP's router, and from there to Anonymizer - in ALL cases. Your request is never, repeat never, hidden from your ISP. Any LE, from local to federal, has unfettered access to this information without the necessity for a warrant.
I'm tired of dealing with this.
Back to the girls...
Cookies are one problem it has, but there are many other incompatibility issues with anonymizer.
-- Staff
beginning of how our lives will all be changed in the new Bush/Ashcroft era, unless we stand up for the freedoms we have as Americans. Did you know the USA PATRIOT Act allows the FBI to go any public librarian and ask for your reading list, and if the librarian tells you, or the media, or even his elected officials about the FBI inquiry, then the librarian can then be charged with a crime?
What we need to do as Americans who love freedom is to not be intimidated by all of this, but to continue to exercise our rights as Americans. Keep checking any books you want out of the Library, keep going to whatever websites you want, and keep expressing your opinions in any public or private forum you want.
Too late. It's all in place. Your senators approved it and so did you congresscritters. We're all about to get fucked. The major growth industries in this country now are war and prisons. If you want to protect yourself you better start - two years ago.
Gawd this is depressing.
Back to the girls...
Old school days are gone. The MAN has the technology and big business/corporation has a new tool. Wish they weren't this way, but then I'm a hobbyist!![]()
Joey
Hee hee
My favorite trick, is to leave misrepresentative paper trails whenever I can. This new scheme, according to the newspaper article, is basically "intended" (word used advisedly) as a marketing tool. They'll figure out if you have a Visa, and then whether you prefer Shell or Mobil, and then whether you go to the Rockies or the seashore, and then start targeting ads when you hit appropriately programmed websites. Or, in the near future, TV and radio channels.
So, what I do, is get on the mailing lists of all the most inappropriate sorts of groups I can. I am a die-hard Libertarian who almost always votes Democrat (go figure) so, I've signed up for everything free that the Republican and Green parties can mail to me. I figure it's costing them postage, at least. ![]()
Also, I'm in my mid-thirties but have been solicited by the American Association of Retired Persons for almost two decades now. I get all the gardening and needlepoint catalogs designed for seniors. Heehee.
I don't own a home, but I've applied for home-equity loans (and, naturally, gotten rejected by the automated system when it read the total value of my house as "$0"). I hate American football, so the NFL sends me thirty or forty requests a year about joining my "local team" fan club. My "local team" changes about once a month. I tend to pick whoever happens to have been slaughtered last week. Heehee.
When I DO want a service or product, I use my real name, rather than the thinly veiled variation which I use for the stuff above. Basically, a simple switch from Johnnie Public to John Q. Public helps me keep in mind who is stealing my information for whom.
I don't have much problem with marketeers having access to my information. I would rather that targeted internet-based merchandise make its way closer to outlets near me, than that I continue to have to buy oversided Wal-mart-waddler based bluejeans and have them tailored down to my more svelte size, simply because someone in Brockton Connecticut figured out that statistically most Americans are obese. The marketing stuff doesn't bother me.
But the FBI stuff really really bothers me. And I am SURE that the former (business use) is the beginning of a slide down the slippery slope toward the latter (oppression), especially in a world where citizenship itself is coming more and more to be defined in terms of who can afford to buy certain rights. So I make sure nobody has anything accurate on me. It's not hard to do, really. And we also have Microsoft to thank for infiltrating all those information-gathering systems with computer geeks who don't have enough education to know how to think clearly, and its own software to inevitably crash.
Unfortunately, it's a "guilty until proven innocent" type of thing -- I have to go out of my way to force a situation which we would all prefer to be the default, rather than the authorities going out of THEIR way to make it possible for me to lead a free life. And that I dislike greatly -- but I'm not so much of a fool as to believe that any governmental system has ever operated differently.
Anyone seen "Bob Roberts"? The "committee" government is indeed growing -- Ashcroft and Rumsfeld are just figureheads of the NSC and so forth. Don't let 'em know what we know about 'em! ![]()
I read recently. Seems the guy (who happened to be straight) had watched too many cooking shows, so Tivo figured out that he must be gay, and starting programming documentaries about gay rights for him. Then he purposely watched a bunch of war movies, and Tivo started programming "Inside the 3rd Reich" type shows. They were wrong on both counts in their characterization of what kind of person he was, but that didn't stop them from trying.
Even though the Tivo story is funny, it's not so funny to think about how these systems "profile" us and determine what kind of people we are supposed to be.
The Direct Marketing Association, a major industry group, was pressured by the IRS into giving them the subscriber list for Car and Driver magazine. The reason: some genius in the government had somehow figured out that subscribers to that particuar magazine were more likely to be tax cheats!
We've all experienced amazon.com telling us: "Based on the books you've ordered in the past, we thought you might be interested in these books". It's all based on a profile.
The scary thing, as you point out, is that now Ashcroft will want this marketing info, so that he can identify those who fit the "profile" of a terrorist.
How long until they create a hobbyist profile?
If you love the freedoms we have as Americans, fight this! Write to your Congressman and other elected officials! Talk to other people and let them know what's going on!
I am Liberatarian all the way (but like the other guy above who is the same---I also end up voting Democrat too)
So true what you guys are saying....
When I post on here I now post under an ALIAS because we all know the govt. reads this site and I don't want them knowing what I'm saying on here.
It's good to have a few aliases and switch around from time to time.
Watch out, Big Brother IS watching,
Alias 007
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,56860,00.html
http://sfweekly.com/issues/2002-11-27/smith.html/1/index.html
-- Modified on 12/15/2002 5:52:28 PM