The Privacy Blog Podcast – Ep.10: Storage Capacity of the NSA Data Center, Royal Baby Phishing Attacks, and how your SIM Card is Putting you at Risk

Welcome to Episode 10 of The Privacy Blog Podcast, brought to you by Anonymizer. In July’s episode, I’ll be talking about the storage capacity of the NSA’s data center in Utah and whether the US really is the most surveilled country in the world. Next, I’ll explain why the new royal baby is trying to hack you and how your own phone’s SIM card could be putting your privacy at risk.

Lastly, I’ll discuss the current legal status of law enforcement geolocation, Yahoo!’s decision to reuse account names, and  some exciting Anonymizer Universal news.

As always, feel free to leave any questions in the comments section. Thanks for listening!

Yahoo to ignore IE 10 Do Not Track

From Declan's article on CNET.

The fight over the "do not track" flag continues.

In the latest version of Internet Explorer (version 10), Microsoft has made "do not track" the default setting. This makes tracking by websites an "opt in" rather than an "opt out" proposition. Privacy advocates have long favored this approach, but advertisers don't like it.

Yahoo feels so strongly about this that they say that they will ignore the Do Not Track (DNT) flag when coming from IE 10 browsers. The open source Apache web server is also going to come configured to ignore the IE 10 DNT flag.

So, even if you explicitly want Do Not Track, and would have gone in and manually enabled it, you will be tracked by Yahoo anyway.

Ironically, this means that if you actually want to not be tracked, you need to use a different browser and manually enable the setting.

I do appreciate the effort Microsoft, and shame on you Yahoo.