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PC Magazine September 16, 2003 Sheryl Canter |
Hiding Your Identity Anonymous remailers let you communicate on the Internet without exposing who you really are. |
PC World August 7, 2001 Tom Mainelli |
Anonymous Browsing Gets Easier Privacy Button lets you activate Anonymizer services via Internet Explorer... |
Searcher August 2000 Josh Duberman & Michael Beaudet |
Privacy Perspectives for Online Searchers: Confidentiality with Confidence This article presents some of the issues and questions involved in online privacy from the information professional's perspective. We offer it as a resource for making more informed decisions in this rapidly changing area. |
PC World March 2002 Kim Zetter |
Snoopware: New Technologies, Laws Threaten Privacy The FBI's 'Magic Lantern' keystroke logger could help catch terrorists, but at what cost to your fundamental rights? |
IEEE Spectrum December 2006 Steven Cherry |
Virtually Private A new Swedish network service helps you hide online. |
PC World June 1, 2000 Matt Lake |
Privacy Special Report: Stealth Surfing All right already, we all know there's no privacy on the Web. Online intrusion is like the proverbial weather--everybody talks about it, but nobody ever seems to do anything about it. |
PC Magazine February 1, 2008 Eric Griffith |
How to Reclaim Your Online Privacy We reveal the methods you need to surf, e-mail, IM, and more while reclaiming your ever-elusive online confidentiality. |
PC Magazine October 26, 2004 Cade Metz |
Anonymity Apps: Surf in Secret If you want your private behavior to remain private, you need a utility that can bypass your company's servers and keep your Internet traffic anonymous. Here, we review a trio of anonymity apps: Anonymizer 2004, Bypass, and GhostSurf 2005 Platinum. |
PC World October 5, 2001 Frank Thorsberg |
PC World Poll Highlights Privacy Concerns Our online poll shows most readers are concerned about giving the government more power for online surveillance... |
Macworld July 2000 Tom Negrino |
Protect Your e-Mail Keep Your Private Words from Prying Eyes |
PC World October 2002 Andrew Brandt |
Privacy Watch: How to Surf Without Leaving a Trace Worried that someone may be looking over your shoulder -- in the virtual sense -- as you browse the Web? If so, you don't have to be an online agoraphobe any longer: New tools from old hands in Web privacy will let you surf with complete anonymity. |
PC World April 6, 2001 Sean Captain |
SafeWeb's Anonymous Browsing Service Free, Web-based service covers your surfing tracks and foils privacy-stealing code... |
PC Magazine October 10, 2007 Sascha Segan |
On the Web: Less Anonymity, More Privacy "Anonymity" lets people release the worst in themselves through trolling and online fraud, and disconnects people from a reality where you're held responsible for the stupid things you say. |
InternetNews January 4, 2005 Jim Wagner |
EFF Throws Support to 'Anonymous' Internet Project The group decides to sponsor an open source project that protects Internet users from online surveillance. |
CIO September 15, 2002 Christopher Lindquist |
Danger from Within Just when you thought that network security couldn't get any tougher, Moscow-based iNetPrivacy Software has released AntiFirewall. INetPrivacy claims the utility is for users who value their privacy and freedom of communication, but IT departments may want to be on the lookout for the tool. |
PC World January 12, 2007 Erik Larkin |
Anonymizer Safe Surfing Suite This package of privacy software hides your surfing habits and e-mail address from prying eyes, but its anti-spyware app needs work. |
Salon.com September 14, 2001 Katharine Mieszkowski |
Send in the online spooks? In the aftermath of terrorism, civil libertarians are running for cover. But are they protesting too much? |
CIO January 1, 2002 Stephanie Viscasillas |
Privacy Versus the FBI The antiterrorism law President Bush signed in late October makes it easier for officials investigating potential terrorist activity to get court orders to search companies' business records. It is important to take that into account in your privacy policy. |
InternetNews January 10, 2006 Roy Mark |
'Annoying e-Mail' Law Stirs Blogosphere A new law extending telephone harassment prohibitions and penalties to anonymous e-mails and Voice over IP calls has raised nary a peep among civil liberty groups and the legal community. |
PC Magazine March 1, 2006 Sebastian Rupley |
Who, Me? Following controversy over agreements by Google, Yahoo!, and MSN to comply with Chinese censorship policies, Anonymizer is seeking to free electronic speech in China. |
The Motley Fool September 26, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
Searching for Privacy Online Three of the folks whose search data was leaked onto the Web by Time Warner's AOL unit are suing the company for the blunder. The lawsuit against AOL may very well have ramifications that surpass AOL's own search services and policies. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 25, 2003 Salls & Silverthorne |
Should You Sell Your Privacy? Regulation won't stop privacy invasion, says Harvard professor John Deighton. What will? What if companies paid us to use our identity? A market approach to privacy problems. |
National Defense July 2012 Stew Magnuson |
Al-Qaida May Have Plans to Manipulate Anonymous Hacking Group Anonymous, a loosely organized group of hackers that has targeted big businesses and governments, could be co-opted by nation states and terrorist groups that want to use it for their own ends, cybersecurity experts said. |
CIO August 29, 2011 Robert McMillan |
Five Things CIOs Need to Know about Anonymous The hacking collective dubbed Anonymous has unleashed its brand of pesky "operations" on companies from Visa to Sony. Here are the top five things you need to know about their antics. |
CIO September 1, 2005 David Rosenbaum |
Deep Throats Why, when and under what circumstances journalists use anonymous sources. |