tv [untitled] October 17, 2011 5:31am-6:01am EDT
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attempts to clear the way to the checkpoints seized by kosovo last month led to clashes that saw several people injured. attacks we all appreciate our privacy but our digital dependency is leaving us more exposed than ever r.t. reports coming up. with just one telephone call any person can learn many things about you the biggest privacy invertor of all. yourself. using a search engine browsing just a couple of sites registering with a social network every one of these actions is firmly embedded someway in a global database. deleting this information completely is impossible. to know that now when you're online you have no privacy. you know there's not a lot of ways to protect your identity with credit card details your home address and your every move could land in anyone's hands sitting in my office i can find
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out. your name your address your phone number and there's only one way to escape. who tracks internet users is it possible to remain anonymous online or is disconnecting from good the only method of ensuring you'll precede. a son in law i a u.s. artist born in bangladesh couldn't have imagined that his life would be forever changed by the nine eleven terrorist attacks in two thousand and two he was detained to detroit airport and told that he was suspected of helping terrorists. it all started with an f.b.i. investigation where i was erroneously reported as a terrorist suspect there was a report that an arab matt had fled on september twelfth was hoarding explosives.
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now nevermind i'm not arab nevermind there was no explosives there but in the fear they decided well that guy looks a little different so he must be arab and if he's arab then he must have explosives . later it transpired that her son had been put on the list of suspects by mistake nevertheless the f.b.i. continued to track the artist he feared that sooner or later he might end up in prison at guantanamo bay that was when his son decided to make life easier for the special services he set up a site called tracking transience where he posts every single bit of personal information about himself in real time. so you're seeing here you can see that there's a red arrow with some boxes and you can see a city in the image well ok so where is the city looks like there's a river nearby and there's lots of green let's go to a little bit further and we're in this building right here next to
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a church. as the days and months went by the constant information feed of this one person's life became an artistic project when i first started this project people thought i was out of my mind why would you want to tell everyone every little detail of everything that you're doing. why is that what why why do you want to do that well not even. seven eight years later we have seven hundred fifty million people on facebook. essentially doing the same thing. you have guinea kaspersky is one of russia's most successful businessman his computer security company has perske labs was founded in one nine hundred ninety seven it's now the country's leading producer of antivirus software the company has offices around the world for years kaspersky has campaigned for the introduction of unified laws for the internet he feels safeguarding personal information should be
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the prime objective. israel with up with the risk of political i suppose you have created a program and want to launch it on the internet or you log on to a banking page sure want to do something else that may potentially harm of the uses in that case you're welcome to present your internet passport that passport might come in a variety of forms. but russia's leading specialist in online security seems powerless in the face of offline criminals on an april morning in twenty eleven. event was on his way to work as usual passing an old industrial area two criminals were lying in wait they overpowered yvette bundled him into a cop and took him to a location in moscow. in the evening. received a phone call the kidnappers demanded a ransom of several million dollars as it turned out the abductors had green divans
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personal information from his page on russia's most popular social network it included his phone number home address and daily bloops to work. should encourage users to post that sort of information if a site all successful private information criminal charges should be brought against it in the event of a leak. you have. to talk to us on the condition that he would not be asked to comment on his son's abduction even so it prompted russia's leading computer security campaigner to come up with codes of conduct for firms dealing in people's private data. the capital social networks or public space like cafes and restaurants that's where people get together with of this it was because normally the organizations that run such places work for profit kids' social networks all commercial stretches the responsibility for the security of their
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guests should be on their heads and wallets. run event especially was being held in the basement of a house in the moscow region his father and police were trying to figure out his abductors whereabouts an intercepted phone call to help police detain the kidnappers during the handover of the ransom. the incident sparked fears that such websites were becoming a goldmine for criminals but internet security specialists maintain that the kaspersky case is the exception rather than the rule. of muscle with the thought in this case the fact that social networks are used by huge mass of people plays a positive role if there were only a hundred users disclosing information about themselves there is no doubt that they would be the primary target but today the threat is spread over millions of users this means that what was dangerous several years ago is far less risky today for.
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the name of the game here guys is not that there's people out there big brother that want to your privacy they want to sell you this is all about money it's not nefarious it's not sinister this is all. that they want to sell you a stuff they wouldn't know everything about you so they can sell you stuff stephen ramba is a private investigator who runs an online investigation service he's told the united states holding discussions on his report that get straight to the point prissy is dead get over it at every stop along his tool he repeated his message over and over again the true meaning of the word previous c. was lost a long time ago and i'll tell you the biggest the biggest privacy inverter. your cell phone this has changed everything it tells me where you or it tells me who
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your friends or it tells me who's important to you it tells me where you work it tells me where you live it tells me where you eat it tells me everything that i need to know about you yandex is russia's leading internet search engine the company's motto of here you can find anything you want became even more significant in the summer of twenty eleven at that time thousands of private s.m.s. messages sent via the website of a russian cell phone operator ended up being displayed in the deck search engine anyone could read the private correspondence. as a matter of fact there was a mistake made by that size developers in any case those messages were in the public domain what a d.m. digs do it simply found those pages that's all there is to it with. it's now known that search engines are a very simple method of finding
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a lot of personal information security specialist remind people that online communication is never a private conversation even if you think you are talking to only one person. any information that is available to all can and will be indexed and that's for sure search engines are being improved all the time progress never goes back it always moves forward to acknowledge is don't become worse but search engines are always being improved. one of russia's most popular blog services live journal is housed in these offices the company's major problem is the growing number of users who are turning to popular social networks. so power we coming along with security. but live journal stuff think the tide will turn they say that in five years' time those users will be terrified by the thought that they have revealed
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too much about themselves to the world. most users are not aware of the fact that they are at risk they now know that social networks are fraught with security frets following media reports about users being robbed after revealing their personal information online that's when the anonymity era will set in everybody will begin purging their profiles and leaving social networks it's true that live journal is a social network but with a difference most of its uses a cane to hide personal information under nicknames without revealing their true identities put simply they've created online personas for their online lives. content is the all important principle of live journal where we are concerned with what people write about it but who the writers are is not so important if they spoke as a social network it is important to know who you and your friends are with us it is
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not that important even a live journal users do identify their journal somehow but they are not amiss in the sense that a journal is not a person. please send a book. until recently the well known russian fiction writer said again how to live journal page like most authors he hid his identity under a nickname. his page was one of the three most popular russian blogs but when comments on one of his entries erupted in scandal and he started getting death threats he decided to close his account. realize that include an air of privacy because the internet is. privacy people need to understand that but artists he has no intention of closing his own project instead he wants to share more information with the world. i figured in my way with this much information that is
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i share i live an incredibly anonymous and private life. and i wouldn't be able to do that if there wasn't all this information about me in the public because that's really just noise at the end of the day. sam expects most people to follow his example very soon and usher in an era of total information transparency the american artist insists that it will be a world without secrets. the culture is that so much i'm afraid we're going to make a lot of people here at berkeley air of great discontent all across the globe people are protesting against the political economic and financial status quo is this because of. a very warm welcome to you this is your news today protesters on the walls street
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they are. leads in tinsel and your chance to choose isn't a good book for example the status of the human experiment is exploding or will. we put your programs in this rap music or did you know the military trying to make sense of local economy and its arcane claims as financial templates each of the researchers scrambling to maintain our confidence in markets and banking on the primitive wants to be easing trade imbalances recess v.p. nations close to collapsing a sub prime loans foreclosed homes people. to fail circulate banks again feel level i think it's a us crash and imminent smash the ceiling team claims it's like rotten justice in athens three the i.m.f. import strikes me on just programs increase the total economy. ok.
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twenty eleven was a turbulent month in london the fatal police shooting of a young man from an ethnically tense suburb sparked disturbances on a scale the british capital had not seen in decades. small shops and ordinary london has suffered most of all in the standoff burglaries skyrocketed over a week of disturbances. so i walk in my apartment first thing i notice is that the door was open so i look around my flat was completely rampage it was like a tornado went through all these drawers were opened and closed and things were spread all over the place that's when i noticed that the window was open and that
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the bars had been webster open. so here. all the damage to the window thieves ransacking the flats of programa craig martin took away what he treasured most a laptop storing his personal information and numerous projects. personal my work laptop had all kinds of software and files on it although it was encrypted i felt safe about that i just didn't want it falling in the wrong hands. at the point the police came in did their forensic work they were dusting for prints i couldn't help but think that i was in the stone age i was like ok that they're never going to find this stuff it's gone. craig had little faith in the police's ability to catch the culprits any time soon so he decided to launch his own investigation social networks and a special program he didn't stored on his computer proved helpful and since really how it works is go to the website and then your laptop is stolen and the laptop
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next time it's online will start sending reports. containing location pictures of the person if you have a built in webcam as well as screenshots of what's going on on the screen at that particular time it to create just a few hours to find out all that he needed to know about the man who'd stolen his computer he knew his exact location facebook provided him with a thief's account on the laptops web camera took pictures over a google search later i knew where he went to high school whose family was all kinds of information about the person since they built this dossier of information and turned it over to the london metro police they were able to pick him up within twenty four hours after that. through his job craig has been tracing changes in how private lives a detailed on the internet for quite some time he maintains it's impossible for anyone who's been online to hide any decency you have to know that now when you're
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online you have no privacy and you know there's not a lot of ways to protect your identity especially people that use facebook and have information on blogs or twitter they know is a personal piece of information to find the whole enchilada. government steadily go of it's arguably the most eccentric figure in russian business he was russia's first dollar millionaire and founded the first commodity exchange now stella gov lives in a village he calls on his countryman to reject the accomplishments of progress or so this is a freezer. we didn't have one until earlier this year. and it's a dream come true because now we have a no nonsense reason. we can pack it with big lumps of meat an oist when the cold comes around i mean down there last all year long.
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stanley of moved his family into a big timber house that has no freezer. and no internet access. if this thing is all spawn then it's become a master and soon a bank or two then they'll be complete dependence on it and if you want to escape there's only one way out. never the less sternly god has to remain in tune with the times a couple of years ago he launched a new business project he needs to make daily trips to moscow where he spends ten hours in his skyscraper office. go feels it's too late for him to worry about his information prissie too much information is already on the internet but he doesn't allow his children to even approach a computer let alone go online. here whatever poses
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a threat to children's health isn't banned it's actually the other way around asphalt is far less dangerous than the t.v. set and even chemicals are not as dangerous as the internet. to program as tampering with the new i phone in the spring of twenty eleven stumbled upon a final they'd never come across before. as it turned out the phone was storing information about its owner's movements for the month. now apple explain this was fairly sort of innocent and that may well have been the case but you can certainly see it happening in the future where this is less innocent and people start using this information for example in court cases and if you're accused of doing something people might say i demand to see this file on your phone which will prove you are where i said you were later the owners of other smartphone brands also complained about snooping telephones many spoke in earnest about the arrival of the
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big brother era people don't want that data to be sent to his company and the best thing to do is not necessarily use those services that are to the internet or you know just to put that data right out there on the internet or something that like the internet like a smart. program a sammy cam is a security expert he's one of the most prominent whistleblowers of major corporations such as apple and google he's sure that the recording of all i phone users movements is just a trial step subsequent developments will be more sophisticated. marketing specialists not the only ones who reap the benefits of information transparency social networks have also made life much easier for recruitment agencies it wasn't that long ago that human resources staff would rely exclusively on the candidate told them about themselves and recommendations from previous employers now they have more detailed information. we can find out where
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candidates have been employed before where they spoke in interviews what communities they belong to or what conferences they have attended that's what we need to know above all if we see accessible online information about somebody being a member of some odd community we will have doubts but his or her adequate behavior . before making a final decision a recruitment agency today checks all information that's available on the internet . this way place will start with a brief interview. there was an incident at one major company the person in question was the former head of h.r. and was not particularly well liked one day security decided to investigate him and they looked through his browsing history they came across the questionnaire results that he had filled out on a dating site it turned out that he had made no attempt to hide the fact that he
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was a paedophile needless to say the man was thrown out of the company in disgrace. activists from the russian pirate party believe it is possible to be anonymous online in the spring of twenty eleven they created a site called room leaks which looked similar to the notorious wiki leaks project the system developed by the russian pirates makes it possible for anyone sending information to remain absolutely anonymous. so if. you do on the internet who will be used against you. every bit of information you spread through social networks and blogs in the history of your search where is all that is stored. with that information shapes a true profile so much so that it's possible to model your psychological portrait. even so there are systems out there that can make it anonymous and secure. private
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detective agency stephen ramba always concludes his public addresses with the same message be humble the era of global openness and universal information transparency began a long time ago. his advice to those who want to have at least a measure of protection is simple make your visits to the internet less frequent. i post just often enough to let people know a lot of. possibly once a month. i'm very careful that i keep location aware programs turned off so doesn't report where i physically at the moment i don't reports what i'm doing or or who arm where the things are. but the artist he advocates a different strategy here just people not to hide anything and share information
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about their every move with the entire world. the reason that information is value is that no one else has access to it. but by cutting out this middleman and giving it directly to the public the information that this agency has has no value whatsoever. so therefore it devalues the currency and the currency being intelligence but if hundreds of millions of people started doing this we would have to rethink the entire system from the ground up we would have to in that back and as a matter of fact that day isn't it's not that far from that day. social networking sites continue to be relatively quiet on the issue if they use a security but with so much information readily available criminals will continue to exploit it cases like craig martin's and event kaspersky won't be the last. it seems the only true solution to maintaining your privacy is to completely go
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offline. from the days of the manhattan project in one thousand forty two the university of california has been involved through the science of its provision and scientists and their relationship to the mercy you see since day one has been in charge of research in designing testing nuclear weapons and to some extent producing weapons every single nuclear weapon in cities arsenal was designed by university of california. we don't warm. to the versity of california was selected as the because the army needed
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supports wells for the protesters across the us. going nowhere. and the government gives him. a chance to change the syrian president's constitutional plan is welcomed by aspiring politician but by key opposition figures who are set on bringing assad. and risks over a new trouble on cause oppose a northern border with us nato threatens to remove the so barricades on monday if they don't do it themselves.
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