Be Careful with Your Smartphone

Over at the Security Monkey blog, Chief does a really nice job of breaking down how someone’s photos from their iPhone wound up on the internet, without the user having ever sent them to anyone.

Even if you’re not very technical-minded, I think you’ll be able to see what happened, and some simple steps you can take to keep your own data private. And, of course, his recommendations are always great:

  • Use strong passphrases on all of your accounts – phrases that nobody else but you would ever guess. 
  • Create GOOD security questions where the answers can’t be easily located online or through some sort of social engineering. 
  • Do not reuse passphrases – ever.  One passphrase per site/account.
  • Always enable secondary authentication like SMS. 
  • Don’t use cloud-based backup solutions for highly sensitive things unless you accept the risks associated.
  • Do you really have over 400 friends on Facebook that need to see all of your personal data?  Probably not.  Liberally remove people from your Facebook account that you don’t know personally.  Reduce the amount of personal information shared on social media sites in general.
  • Don’t take sensitive photos of yourself with your smart phone. spacer

As for my own thoughts. Look, I happen to think social networks are a great way to keep in touch with family and friends, and a great way to interact with folks who share common interests. I’ve made a lot of good contacts in the years I’ve been blogging, and then using social networks. On the other hand, have no illusions about the level of privacy you have. All it takes is one little bug for private messages to become public, or one careless moment for your reputation to be stained forever. Always keep this in mind when using these tools too.

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    Posted October 1st, 2012 in SocialNetworking, Tech | No Comments »

    This Week’s Links (weekly)

    • Are you using a spoon to dig an eDiscovery ditch?

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • E-Discovery Gone Wrong: The Blooper Reel

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • WEBINAR: Summation End User Review – YouTube

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • AccessData® Releases Summation 4.1 and AD eDiscovery 4.0

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • What Ever Happened to Regular Old Discovery?

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • What’s New with Summation – YouTube

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • Running a Defensible Predictive Coding Workflow

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • Bringing e-discovery inside: 12 tips for in-house counsel

      tags: LitSupport MM

    • The Machine Learning/Predictive Coding Silver Bullet

      tags: LitSupport MM

    Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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    Posted September 30th, 2012 in Links | No Comments »

    Would You Endorse Someone?

    LinkedIn is betting that you would.

    I suppose this feature is great for people who would write a recommendation, if they had the time, or knew how to write a good recommendation. On the other hand, while the time involved is probably a big part of why people don’t write recommendations on LinkedIn, it’s not the only reason. Many large organizations frown upon their employees writing LinkedIn recommendations for former coworkers, especially for people who used to report to you. They would prefer to stay risk averse and have all such things handled by an HR professional, skilled in the art of saying nothing, I’m sure. spacer

    Given that hesitation, would you endorse someone’s listed skills? Is the simple act of looking at a LinkedIn profile, like mine for instance, and checking off that a box that basically says “Yes this person does, in fact, posses this skill”, a risk to you? Or is it nothing more than the equivalent of a “Like”? On the flip side, does someone endorsing one of your skills on LinkedIn actually mean anything? Do recommendations mane anything. for that matter? How much value would you place in someone having “endorsed” skills?

    Wouldn’t that depend on who was doing the endorsing, and whether you knew that person well? It would to me. An endorsement is only as good as the person giving it. If it’s a random stranger I don’t know, it won’t carry near as much weight as it would if it came from someone I am connected to closely, and knew well. (Someone I’d endorse, for that matter!)

    In the end, no matter how many endorsements LinkedIn adds, relationships still matter.

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    Posted September 27th, 2012 in Career, SocialNetworking | No Comments »

    Why iOS Devices are Popular

    I’ve probably seen that Samsung commercial a dozen times over the last few days. The one that makes a pretty good mockery of people waiting in line for the iPhone 5. The one that makes a really good point about all the things that still, STILL, aren’t available for iPhone users, that we could have on the Galaxy S3.

    The commercial makes perfectly valid points, and yet Apple will still sell a bajillion iPhones over the next few weeks. Is it because it’s a better phone that the Galaxy or other Andriod devices? No, not really. Is it because people are just completely under Steve Jobs’ charismatic influence, even from the grave? Well, maybe. spacer

    Or is it because no matter the limitations of the iPhone, when I turn it on, everything just works. When I install an app, 90% of the time, it will just work, and it will do the one thing I want that app to do on my phone.

    Let me tell you a story. Today, I spent more time than I care to admit trying to scan some documents. I have a multifunction device in my home office. It’s wireless. My laptop can print to it all day long without ever losing any connection to it. I could not, however, use it to scan. The scan function did not see any computer to save the file to on the wireless network. Likewise, my laptop could not connect to a scanner, yes the very same device that it could print to easily. I had to find a USB cable and connect it to my laptop and install it as a new device before I could scan the 5 pages I needed to scan. This is not how people want to work.

    This would be the antithesis of an iPhone or iPad. When I open up one of those devices, I can immediately start doing what I want to do with it, and if I can’t, I take it to the Apple store and let them figure it out. So yeah, it has limitations, but users never have to spend as much time getting it to do what they want to do as they do with other devices. Thus, the appeal.

    When technology gets in the way of us doing what we need to do, it loses favor, regardless of how much “better” that technology might be. Apple has been successful in the past because their technology didn’t get in the way. Let’s see if that holds true for the iPhone 5, or other new devices. If the Maps on iOS6 are any indication, they may be in for some rough days.

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    Posted September 26th, 2012 in Mac, Tech | No Comments »

    This Week’s Links (weekly)

    Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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    Posted September 23rd, 2012 in Links | No Comments »

    Has Delicious Been Hacked?

    I’ve noticed in the last couple of days that a number of blogs I’m subscribed to that use the auto-posting features of delicious, or pull in that RSS feed of bookmarks have been shopping up with some “odd” entries of late. I’ve not been using delicious of late myself, but I still have an account. When I log in over there my library doesn’t appear to have any suspicious links, but the RSS feed sure seems to be a mess. Looks kind of like what I’ve seen when a WordPress SQL injection is in place.

    Granted, I’ve been onsite training and traveling this week, so I haven’t had time to check the blogosphere or twitter to see if that has been confirmed, so if anyone has some info to share, please leave it in the comments.

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    Posted September 20th, 2012 in Blogging, Tech | 2 Comments »

    This Week’s Links (weekly)

    Posted from Diigo. The rest of my favorite links are here.

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    Posted September 16th, 2012 in Links | No Comments »

    Remembering Heroes

    A song by Seanchai and the Unity Squad that never fails to bring a tear to my eye.

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