It's a tragic consequence of our modern world

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SamanthaMD commented on a different blog post, "Google is not always your friend." Of course she is right. And I'm using that prompt as a launching point for this little rant. Thanks for your indulgence.

It's a tragic consequence of our modern world that your identity is pretty much up for sale. Here in the US at least our corporate owned government pretty much ensures that anything you do on line is either at risk or has been compromised. Simply connecting your computer to "the net" more or less guarantees some degree of compromise or at least risk of compromise.

It's not just social media and the Office As A Service platforms like Office365 and Google Office. It's also every router your traffic traverses. It's the exit points for every VPN you might use. Its every virtual machine and cloud service you might use. it's even the devices you use at home. Your phone and your tablet, PC, laptop, game console, even your smart refrigerator.

It's not even intentionally nefarious. At least not most of the time. Largely it's simply the intersection of how the services work, human nature and time that cause the risk. Keeping secrets is hard. Security is hard. Privacy even harder. The fight against complacency is hardest. Especially where humans are involved and our default is to trust. Our ability to ignore chronic issues in favor of acute ones.

So what do we do about it? About the only action we have is to dis-intermediate and start taking action at our regulatory levels. The only response we can have to powers of sight is powers of oversight. We need to ensure that there are robust and transparent oversight processes for any power of sight we grant to those to whom grant access to our personal proprietary information. Unfortunately that is hard and requires vigilance and it goes against our natures.

We buy buy products and services from these companies that provide them. Often we don't have a choice. At the same time realize that these companies use some of that money we pay them to lobby for regulation and legislation that favors their interests. In the absence of meaningful input from us our legislatures tend to favor those who provide them with the means to retain their office.

Peace

Comments

Install Linux...

... and reclaim your computer.

You don't have to buy the newest and greatest PC for it. That old PC you stored in the basement because it is too slow will likely work like a charm under Linux. Installing it might be a bit daunting for non-geeks, but try it a couple of times, and you will get it right.

There are myriads of distributions - different Linux flavors. My favorite is Debian - it not only is rock-stable, but also is pretty user-friendly these days. However, you might prefer Ubuntu, Mint, CentOS, SuSE, Mageia... the list is long. Each flavor has unique strengths, is the most convenient to different people etc. Don't be afraid to experiment and find yours!

Linux comes with tons of software that is as free as it. LibreOffice rivals Microsoft Office, and will not transmit your data to anyone. E-book readers, games, browsers, myriads of tools, you name it. Everything is open-source - if someone tries to sneak spyware or other badware in, immediately someone else will notice and remove it.

Linux will not protect you from being spied on by your Internet provider, the services companies etc. But it will at least stop them at the gates of your PC. You will have a bit of e-space that is yours.

Resistance is futile

You will be assimilated by the Google

The only thing George Orwell got wrong was the date!

We the willing, led by the unsure. Have been doing so much with so little for so long,
We are now qualified to do anything with nothing.

LibreOffice from PortableApps.com

(This doesn't address being tracked, hacked or any of other problems mentioned by others; only LibreOffice mentioned by 'curiosityitself'.)

I've been using LibreOffice from PortableApps.com for over 10 years. It's a Micro-squish Office Suite look-alike/work-alike. (Maybe not current/latest version of MS Office.) Documents are "portable enough" between the two. I've had no/very few technical problems with anything from PortableApps.

First, download their menu system onto a USB (or hard drive), then download applications 'under' the menu system. Un-mount (disconnect) and carry USB and files to another computer, no problems. (Programs likely won't run on a machine/operating system that is 'too' different; data should be OK. So install a menu and software for the 2nd machine).

Programs have an 'uninstall'; worst case, delete the unwanted director(ies). Either way, and by design, no 'crud' is left on host machine.

Also, by design, no crud is put on/left behind when using a company computer, or Library, or a friend's - leaves no tracks. (Unless you stored something on the host machine itself, of course.)

I'd say PortableApps.com installation has 'geek level' of around 2 on a ten-scale. And just about zero 'geekyness' using the menu system. Each downloaded program has its own own geek-level, of course.

LibreOffice

Enemyoffun's picture

After the new version of Word came out, I tested it in a trail. Managed a day of it before I cancelled the trial and removed it from my computer. I was pointed to LibreOffice and have been using it ever since. Its VERY good :)

I have been using LibreOffice

Rose's picture

I have been using LibreOffice for so long, I can't remember when I started. I believe they ported it from OpenOffice, which I used for a long time before Libre was made. Now, I'm using a web based editor that is a port off of Libre, running from my personal nextcloud server, called Collabora. Works very nice. Much more in depth than Google Docs, or Word on the cloud. It does run slower than Google Docs, as in displaying what you're typing, but that is a consequence of running such an in depth word processor inside your browser.

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Hugs!
Rosemary

Unfriendlies

Patricia Marie Allen's picture

The net is highly populated by unfriendly service. As mentioned, Google will flood your computer with ads for any product that you search for. Makes no difference that you searched and bought what ever it was, you still see ads for it until you make another search.

Amazon is another that I don't trust. It seems that they have some kind of ability to strike exclusive deals with manufacturers so that the only place you can buy their product is through Amazon.

As a result, I don't use Google (except Maps when I need to navigate to an new to me location) but have switched to Duckduckgo.com for my search engine and haven't bought anything from Amazon for the last five years. Sucks because I don't have access to some products that I might have wanted to buy.

Hugs
Patricia

Happiness is being all dressed up and HAVING some place to go.
Semper in femineo gerunt

Maps is even worse than ads

Now they have an idea of what your physical location is as your phone is giving them location data. You are allowing them to track your very movements (!)

I go old school and use a GPS by Garmin and I believe there is no tracking there.

I don’t own a smartphone for good reasons as it has become big brother’s tracking device of choice. And yes that is a deliberate choice and not because of being a luddite, which I am not.

So, no flip phones available you say? Try Consumer Cellular, they have plenty.

Anyway people, don’t be a sheep to technology. Technology is meant to serve us and not the other away around.

Never trust anything that is ‘free’ as inevitably, you become the product or you will get pwned.

One would think people would learn the lesson of Troy and the Greek ‘gift’.

Remember? that was ‘free’.

Smart Phones

terrynaut's picture

Hey! I also don't own a smart phone. I'm not a luddite either. I have a nice, modern laptop that I'm using to type this message. But smart phones concern me for many reasons. I'm old enough to have grown up before smart phones were around so I know it's easy to survive without them.

Anyway, it's nice to see another person who doesn't own a smart phone.

- Terry

It doesn't matter how smart your phone is,

your carrier has to know where you are to receive your radio. In addition, they are required by law to pinpoint you for 911 (US:emergency). Some tried at first to triangulate your cells, but as that wasn't reliable enough, everyone gave up and went with GPS universally.
Your carrier knows where you are every moment your phone is on (not just in use), and this data is available to data buyers and has been for many years. Many different data sets are available from all kinds of vendors in the data market, and they all know that a simple cross-reference can tie all your data together and reliably identify you.
Anything that touches any Google property, including YouTube, Google Docs, and any Android device, will be stored and indexed (ie all your private emails, docs, and correspondents). Google has contracts with most governments, and China has the most abusive contract of all. Most other governments have some degree of impediments to surveillance, but China takes everything. Google is defacto an operation of the Chinese secret police, and they know everywhere you've been and just about everything you've done for the last 2-3 decades.

Google uses us this poped up on a search

BarbieLee's picture

Barbie Lee
[email protected]
Continue as Barbie
To create your account, Google will share your name,
email address, your profile picture with
Pinterest, see Pinterest privacy policy and
terms of service.

All that data came from Youtube to Google and who knows how much further it has gone. You can bet your last lucky dime all that is in some government storage data base somewhere.
hugs people
Barb
Life is a gift, treasure it.

Oklahoma born and raised cowgirl

Stop Your Searches Being Tracked

terrynaut's picture

Use duckduckgo.com instead of google. It's that easy. Duckduckgo doesn't track you. The only thing I google for now is translations -- and that's very infrequent.

- Terry