Privacy

In an earlier blog where I talked about Facebook, I also talked about how you have literally no privacy the moment you post something on the internet. The moment someone decides to upload something to the internet, it is immortalized forever. Until someone brings down the entire world infrastructure of the world wide web, there will be nothing you can do to get that terrible drunk video of you off of Facebook, or YouTube, or Vimeo, Buzzvideo, World Star, etc. That’s the risk of the internet. You post something, you’re giving what you posted a chance to spread like wildfire. This could happen from your friends seeing it and sharing it with their friends, or it could be that your information became compromised from someone hacking or phishing you.

There are even more worst case scenarios. Today, a security firm named Kryptowire discovered that many Chinese Android phones, such as the Nexus 6P by Huawei and any ZTE products, have a backdoor virus pre-installed on the phones. The article can be read here. All user information is sent back to a Chinese server and there is little you can do to stop it. This goes beyond what posts you make on Facebook or what you upload on Twitter. All your information is sent somewhere else for someone to peruse over before you even decide to upload it somewhere public. In this day and age of new media, where technology takes over our lives, there are exploits everywhere which basically destroys our privacy.

One thought on “Privacy

  1. Definitely valid points. There’s no way of guaranteeing any form of privacy once you sign up for media platforms like Facebook. There’s just no telling how much of your information could be displayed or shared with advances of cataloging people and their interests, especially private info.

    Like

Leave a comment