12.30.2004

Privacy issues for the New Year

The list below was posted to Dave Farber's IP (Intelligent People) list.

NOTE: I updated #5 to include the web site for opting out of pre-screened credit and insurance offers. The web site offers permanent opt-out, the phone number only offers a five year opt-out option.


Protect Your Privacy in The New Year:
Privacy Tips from the Electronic Privacy Information Center (EPIC)
Top Ten Consumer Privacy Resolutions


1. Engage in "privacy self defense." Don't share any personal information with businesses unless it is absolutely necessary (for delivery of an item, etc.). Don't give your phone number, address, or name to retail stores. If you do, they can sell that information or use it for telemarketing and junk mail. If they ask for your information, say "it's none of your business,"
or give "John Doe, 555-1212, 123 Main St." Don't return product warranty cards. Don't complete consumer surveys even if they appear to be anonymous.
Profilers can build in barely-perceptible codes that link you to the survey, and this data goes straight to direct marketers.

2. Pay with cash where possible. Electronic transactions leave a detailed dossier of your activities that can be accessed by the government or sold to telemarketers. Paying with cash is one of the best ways to protect privacy and stay out of debt.

3. Install anti-spyware, anti-virus, and firewall software on your computer.
If your computer is connected to the Internet, it is a target of malicious viruses and spyware. There are free spyware-scanning utilities available online, and anti-virus software is probably a necessary investment if you own a Windows-based PC. Firewalls keep unwanted people out of your computer and detect when malicious software on your own machine tries to communicate with others.

4. Use a temporary rather than a permanent change of address. If you move in 2005, be sure to forward your mail by using a temporary change of address order rather than a permanent one. The junk mailers have access to the permanent change of address database; they use it to update their lists. By using the temporary change of address, you'll avoid unwanted junk mail.

5. Opt out of prescreened offers of credit. By calling 1-888-567-8688, you can stop receiving those annoying letters for credit and insurance offers for up to five years. You can also opt-out permanently using the web site https://www.optoutprescreen.com/. Make sure you opt out for all adults living at the same address.
This is an important step for protecting your privacy, because those offers can be intercepted by identity thieves.

6. Choose Supermarkets that Don't Use Loyalty Cards. Be loyal to supermarkets that offer discounts without requiring enrollment in a loyalty club. If you have to use a supermarket shopping card, be sure to exchange it with your friends or with strangers.

7. Opt out of financial, insurance, and brokerage information sharing. Be sure to call all of your banks, insurance companies, and brokerage companies and ask to opt out of having your financial information shared. This will cut down on the telemarketing and junk mail that you receive.

8. Request a free copy of your credit report by visiting
http://www.annualcreditreport.com. All Americans are now entitled to a free credit report from each of the three nationwide credit reporting agencies, Experian, Equifax, and Trans Union. You can engage in a free form of credit monitoring by requesting one of your three reports every four months. By staggering your request, you can check for errors regularly and identify potential problems in your credit report before you lose out on a loan or home purchase. Currently, these reports are available to residents of most western states. By September 2005, all Americans will have free access to their credit report.

9. Enroll all of your phone numbers in the Federal Trade Commission's Do-Not-Call Registry. The Do-Not-Call Registry (
http://www.donotcall.gov or
1-888-382-1222) offers a quick and effective shield against unwanted telemarketing. Be sure to enroll the numbers for your wireless phones, too.


10. File a complaint. If you believe a company has violated your privacy, contact the Federal Trade Commission, your state Attorney General, and the Better Business Bureau. Successful investigations improve privacy protections for all consumers.

Available online at http://www.epic.org/privacy/2004tips.html

12.29.2004

2004 - Year In Review

Fimoculous.com

Very comprehensive list of lists for the best and worst in 2004.

I'm a list junkie and this page includes most of the sources and lists I'm interested in reading.

I'll still get an end-of-year copy of Rolling Stone, Village Voice and a few others.

12.27.2004

Papyrus - A Calendar Replacement From SBSH, Now In Public Beta Stage

Neat Calendar replacement.  Original post on SmartPhoneThoughts.com 
"SBSH released today their first software for Smartphone devices; Papyrus, a new solution designed to replace the default calendar application on Smartphone devices with a more powerful solution. Papyrus is first released as public beta and can be downloaded for free, in return we hope that users using Papyrus will post their feature requests and ideas on our forms and help us improve Papyrus."

Papyrus looks like a pretty nice replacement...

Chemical Elements - interactive Periodic Table

Chemical Elements.com - An Interactive Periodic Table of the Elements

Not only is this a Generally Useful site (few people know enough about chemistry), but the author gives you a way to cite each page along with a link for the Modern Language Association.

As an example, to cite the page for Carbon (please, God, tell me you know Carbon is an element!):

Bentor, Yinon. Chemical Element.com - Carbon. Dec. 27, 2004 .

12.16.2004

Modest Needs

Modest Needs - Welcome to Modest Needs

This is a charity that funnels all donations into grants to people in need. From what I read, the grants are on the order of a couple of hundred dollars, but that is often enough to help people avoid becoming homeless when they have a run of bad luck.

They don't spend money on advertising, etc. There is an online FAQ with the details. This is of particular interest to me because I think a lot of charities have too much administrative overhead. Very few organizations are efficient as some Catholic nuns I have known and I am very sad that there seem to be fewer and fewer women with vocations.

At Modest Needs, we work to stop the cycle of poverty BEFORE it starts by helping individuals and families to overcome the challenges posed by an unexpected, temporary financial hardship. We do this by remitting payment for small, unexpected expenses that would otherwise threaten a family's ability to remain self-sufficient, with the goal of PREVENTING those persons we are able to assist from entering the cycle of poverty in the first place.

Bart's PE builder v3.1.0 released

Bart's PE Builder is *awesome*.  I need to make some time to download and test the new build. 

Major changes:

- Completely new user interface (http://www.nu2.nu/pebuilder/images/high/pebuilder.gif)

- Removed the resource limits (user resources limit & 24 hour time limit)

- New (easy) way of adding storage and network drivers

- Added CD burning

- Added a slipstream dialog that helps less advanced users to slipstream

their windows installation files. See menu "source->slipstream"

http://www.nu2.nu/pebuilder/

12.13.2004

Beatles Christmas Records

Sci-Fi Hi-Fi: Beatles Christmas Records

I always thought the Beatles Christmas records were cool. Here is a page with the 1963 through 1969 Christmas records as MP3's available for download.

12.12.2004

Observing the Geminids

C&MS: Observing the Geminids

This week! The winter sky show.

The Sherlock Holmes Society of London

Welcome to the website of The Sherlock Holmes Society of London!

Interesting site that has a library of early Sherlock Holmes stories in MP3 format

12.10.2004

GIANTmicrobes!

Welcome to GIANTmicrobes!

This is too cool. The perfect gift for geeks in general or anyone in the health care field.

Now available: The Common Cold, The Flu, Sore Throat, Stomach Ache, Cough, Ear Ache, Bad Breath, Kissing Disease, Athlete's Foot, Ulcer, Martian Life, Beer & Bread, Black Death, Ebola, Flesh Eating, Sleeping Sickness, Dust Mite, Bed Bug, and Bookworm (and in our Professional line: H.I.V. and Hepatitis).

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory

Charlie and the Chocolate Factory - A Yahoo! Movies Exclusive

July 2005. Willie Wonka is a household favorite and even I am looking forward to the new release. You expect the special effects to be better, and Johnny Depp is 'edgy' enough to do as good a job as Gene Wilder.

We shall see.

100 oldest .com domains still registered



Just an interesting factoid. Nostalgia. Another question - how many are defunct, bankrupt or taken over?
DEC, PRIME, UNIPRESS, PEREGRINE, TANDY, THINK, BBN

12.09.2004

SHHHH! - Society for HandHeld Hushing

SHHH! cards

This is just too funny. I already printed it out and I'm plotting when its appropriate to use it. We have all had buffons on cell phones next to us at dinner at least one time in our lives, if not daily.

Its one thing when a cell goes off and the person answers, leaves the room and takes the call. Its another when they just camp out on the phone loudly chatting away about 'news of the day' while your trying to enjoy a meal (coffee, going to the bathroom, etc).

URL - http://www.coudal.com/Shhh.pdf

The Hit We Almost Missed

The New York Times > Opinion > Op-Ed Contributor: The Hit We Almost Missed

From the NYT. Its amazing to read stuff like this 40 years later, but its like a million other decisions we make on a daily basis. Its often out of expediency rather than making the best decision at the time.

12.07.2004

FW: Microsoft Webcasts Calendar downloads

set reminders and post details in blog.


From: Georgeo Xavier Pulikkathara (George the webcast gu
Posted At: Wednesday, December 01, 2004 8:15 AM
Posted To: MSDN Webcasts Weblog
Conversation: Microsoft Webcasts Calendar downloads
Subject: Microsoft Webcasts Calendar downloads

We’ve got a lot of positive responses for the webcasts calendar, so Nicole Stocker on our webcasts team has offered to build a calendar for each of the various webcast programs that Microsoft offers. We'll update this on a monthly basis so that you should be able to download the updated calendars each month.

 

MSDN Webcasts

MSDN Architecture Webcasts

TechNet Webcast Calendar

Security Webcast Calendar

Microsoft Executive Circle Webcast Calendar

Microsoft Business Solutions Webcast Calendar

Microsoft Office System Webcast Calendar

Small Business Webcast Calendar

 

Regards,

 

George, MSDN Webcasts

 

 

backup server

Acronis is an option, follow up with Bryce.


From: tby
Posted At: Monday, December 06, 2004 5:45 PM
Posted To: Bryce Yehl
Conversation: Seriously
Subject: Seriously

I'm ready to invest significant time and money in data protection. It's time to build a home backup server. I can budget about $1200 for this project, split down the middle for hardware and software.

Presently I have six computers that need to be backed up (2 x XP Pro, 3 x Debian, 1 x Fedora) and I expect to bring three more online in the near future (Windows 2003, XP MCE, Debian). Current disk usage is pushing 300GB and I guestimate 2GB of daily changes. At first glance a 4x160GB RAID 5 array (480GB) would seem to leave me plenty of room to grow, but... three new systems plus upgrading my laptop from 40GB to 100GB will eat that up quick. To last more than a year I'll really need a 4x200GB array (600GB), which means if I do everything else on the cheap I'll still blow the hardware budget by at least a hundred bucks.

Maybe I can make that up on the software end. My main requirements are that it be server-based (Linux or Windows), provide full support for Windows XP / 2003 clients, and allow backups to disk. I'd really like something that supports backing up all Open Files — Microsoft did all the heavy lifting with the Volume Shadow Copy Service, and their crappy backup program supports it, so there is no excuse for any decent product not to. Extra points for bare-metal Windows restores and clients running Linux, Irix, or BSD. In that order.

I'd love to go with something that's free — more money for hardware and strippers. Amanda and Bacula are the only Open Source backup solutions I'm aware of. Amanda is not at all suitable, it depends on Samba to back up Windows clients and is effectively worthless. Bacula has a proper Windows client that uses the right Windows APIs to backup files — ACLs are properly bypassed and preserved — but it doesn't do Open Files or the System / Registry hives.

Legato Networker is the only commercial product I'm well-versed in, but even their Workgroup edition exceeds my $600 software budget. Dantz Retrospect is the only non-Enterprise product that I can name. Retrospect Single Server supports Unlimited Windows and Linux clients from a single Windows server... Street prices are as low as $450... Open Files and Bare-metal Restores are very expensive add-ons.

I'm open to all suggestions that can meet my requirements. Cheaper is better, free is best...

Top 100 Overlooked Films of the 1990's

Lists of Bests : The Online Film Critics Society's "Top 100 Overlooked Films of the 1990s"

I'm a sucker for lists and there are so many bad movies out, that this would be a good list for rentals. I recognize about six movies and as many directors (Lynch, Wachowski's, Robbins, Sayles), but I'm willing to try others for a rental when we have time.

I remember the 90's. It was one of the most exciting decades in my life. Ahh, the 90's. Had my first kidney stone, moved to Ireland, had two children, moved twice, left Corporate America, had a big kidney stone and joined a dot com (if you count 2000 as part of the decade).

12.06.2004

The Hydrogen Economy

Physics Today December 2004- The Hydrogen Economy

This is a very good article on the pros and cons of Hydrogen as a replacement energy source for fossil fuels.

For those of you who have suffered through one of my diatribes defending Big Oil, this is a more fully formed argument and it documents that largest source of commercial hydrogen is natural gas (not a byproduct of oil as I may have implied).

12.02.2004

MSN Spaces

MSN Spaces

Microsoft Blogging.

I set one up to test. The Photo Album is pretty neat, but I would like to have more control over the environment. No templates that I could see and no way to import things like lists.

Photo Album can be batch updated.

I also like to have client software like w.blogger to post.

I'm also curious to see if Microsoft let's google crawl its Blogs. I will see if I can submit my site