Facebook's Mark Zuckerberg monetizes the personal information you shared.
What Facebook knows is a result of what you have shared, and done, on Facebook When we create that first Facebook account and go through the profile creation wizard, we can hardly see 10 feet ahead of us. We get a smorgasbord of questions Where and when born? Grade school? Education achieved? High school?' College? Marital status? Spouse name? Where you work or have worked? Then we get to the most dangerous ones. Get ready: Political views Religious views. I wisely answered the dangerous ones. I wrote "Everybody vote for me" and "Everybody worship me." Wise before my time, I suppose. You are the product I challenge you to look at your profile and see what information you are sharing. Remember Facebook is packaging this and selling it to ... Read More
September 24, 2024Mark Anthony Germanos
Tell Facebook you went to Michigan State and you will get ads for a Michigan State University-branded MasterCard.
Are you using Facebook because it is free? How much are you paying to use Facebook each month? “Haha Mark, trick question,” you may say. "It's free. I am paying nothing.” I beg to differ. You are paying with your personal information. Let me introduce Tanya, one of my fellow Michigan State University alums. I found her on Facebook. I sent a friend request and she accepted within 24 hours. We both told Facebook we graduated Michigan State University. On the UP side, sharing that information helped us connect. On the DOWN side, we shared information Facebook monetizes. Highly targeted and branded MasterCard We both checked Facebook one day and saw ads for a Michigan State University branded MasterCard. The advertisers created the MSU branding and then purchased (or ... Read More
September 24, 2024Mark Anthony Germanos
LastPass token in Twilio Authy
I have previously written on Multi Factor Authentication. Multi Factor Authentication (MFA) is a more secure login solution than merely Single Factor Authentication. Single Factor challenges your access based on one trait, usually a password. Multi Factor challenges for at least two traits, including: What you know. This could be a password. What you have. This could include your phone with an authentication app, or the ability to receive PINs via text. What you are. This could include a retinal or fingerprint scan. Yes. Retinas (the back of the eyeball) are as unique as fingerprints. I am advocating you adopt Twilio Authy as your primary Multi Factor Authentication solution. although Google Authenticator is a big name, here’s a summary of why you should adopt Authy… The UP ... Read More
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE. CAMERON PARK, CA (November 12, 2020) – Cyber Safety Net today announced How Hacks Happen and how to protect yourself was awarded the Nonfiction Authors Association's Gold Award. "The Nonfiction Authors Association sets the bar extremely high," says author Mark Anthony Germanos. "To have How Hacks Happen be reviewed by other authors and receive the Gold Award is truly an honor. I am glad the reviewers, and reading public as a whole, are finding How Hacks Happen valuable. The content helps keep you safe online." Some sample reviews are as follows: In How Hacks Happen, Mark Anthony Germanos uses two author personas to explain and illustrate the hazards to our online information: the cybersecurity expert trying to help us and the black-hat hacker exploiting our ... Read More
Protect your patients' charge card and debit card data. Perform PCI-DSS audits annually and vulnerability scans quarterly.
COVID-19 private health information will no longer be private A recent update on both iPhones and Droid phones allows our phones to publish our COVID-19 private health information (PII). Some of us may not even know this is happening. Here’s how to find out if your phone is. On an iPhone, choose Settings > Privacy > Health and you get a screen with COVID-19 Exposure Logging near the top. COVID-19 Exposure Logging is currently off. “Why the worry Mark,” you may ask. The worry is because I did not intentionally add this functionality. It appeared one day. I do not have an app to transmit data yet. However, I am nervous that a future iOS update will include a surprise app that will transmit this information and worse, ... Read More
Google tracks all you do, and has been, for a long time.
Google tracks you (but you can purge what they know) Two days ago, I wrote about how Google tracks you. Please see https://wp.me/paAiP4-wh for a refresher. Go to the Google Dashboard at https://myaccount.google.com/dashboard. Let’s just download this data. Click the Download your data link, which takes you to https://takeout.google.com. Scroll through this list of services Google thinks you use. Google checks all by default. At the bottom, click the Next step button. I am choosing to export this data once, save the data as a .ZIP file and span my data across multiple .ZIP files when the files are larger than 2 GB. Click the Create export button. Google reports “This process can take a long time (possibly hours or days) to complete. You'll receive an email when your ... Read More
Google tracks all you do, and has been, for a long time.
Google tracks your activity They've been tracking you since you first created that free Drive, Gmail or YouTube account. You can review the data Google tracks and download it. Google also lets you delete some data. Google tracks via Gmail Take a deep breath and visit https://myaccount.google.com/dashboard. Login if prompted. Let’s start with the Gmail link. Google indexes Gmail contents and uses that to help determine which ads will be most interesting to us. Let’s see just how much data Google tracks. Click the Gmail button. Click GO TO GMAIL. Click All Mail (on the left). Peruse your entire mailbox. Google reports 4,789 messages in my Gmail account. Although Google reports 4,789 messages, I see only 224 messages in my Inbox, 10 in Trash and 487 in Sent. The rest ... Read More
Is your happy family sharing too much information online? Predators and thieves do research with information you share.
Predators and thieves see what you post online Sometimes people aren't as street smart as they choose to believe. They share personal information online and then act surprised when they become victims of a crime. I am changing my friends’ names here Ann took a picture of an envelope and posted it on Facebook. This envelope had her name, address, city, state and zip. She also told Facebook she was leaving town for 10 days to visit a friend in Hawaii. Two weeks later, she told Facebook her home was burglarized. I told her she presented valuable information online to a potential thief. "Ah yes, I think you're right, Mark," she replied. Jen posted her address and pictures of her home on Facebook. She also told Facebook she was ... Read More
I forgot about my TV station tour. Facebook did not forget.
Facebook acknowledges recording It is not a secret. We share more information at Facebook than at most other online services. Sometimes we forget how much we share and that what goes online never really leaves online. I asked Facebook to export my personal information back on December 28, 2019. Their report read like the most thorough diary every compiled. "Thanks Mark. I now see how they are collecting too much information about us. I am calling my Congressman. That Zuckerberg guy better fess up to what he is doing." I know you are thinking that. Read the Terms of Service Actually, Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg has been called into the Principal's Office twice. He testified on April 10, 2018 and October 23, 2019. Congress asked if users could protect ... Read More