Home > Technobuddy > Archives > 2007 > August > 13 > Entry

Searching for trouble

Search engines like Google and Yahoo would have a weird story to tell if they could talk. What a person searches for online offers - over time - a virtual online biography of the person doing the searching. You’d learn about their hobbies, their professional interests, their family and - yeah - their vices.

Trouble is, of course, that search engines do talk. Records of your searches - protected for your privacy in various forms - do exist. And, in the very worst case, these records can be used by law enforcement to build a case against you. That seldom happens, of course, but when it does the results can be dramatic.

I’ll link to an article here that says, among other things, that “Search terms have been used to convict a wireless hacker and lock up a man charged with killing his wife. Search engine activity is also a fertile growth area for nosy divorce lawyers and employment disputes.”

I recommend the article to you because it does set out some of the risks to your privacy. But, especially important, it provides a really simple way of masking your search records.

You don’t need a guilty conscience to care about this. Searches for everything from mass murderers to sex criminals to ways to spam - based on my job and my stepdaughter’s sociology degree - have clicked right by the screen.

The article also rates the various search engines for the protection offered by their privacy policies. The name of the winner may surprise you.

Permalink | Comments (1) | Post your comment | Categories: General

Comments

By George Gallipeau

August 19, 2007 8:40 PM | Link to this

I am using Windows Vista, Internet Explorer to access the Internet, and Comcast Web Mail for email. (It sucks!). 1. I cannot access my Windows fonts; I cannot copy and paste a picture in my email and send it, the text is sent but NOT the picture; nor can I copy and paste from the contents of an incoming email to a new message. Is there any way to overcome these obstacles? 2. Is it possible for me to select another email provider but still use my Comcast email address? I was a long time subscriber to AOL, and it was easily possible to do all these things, but wanted a faster service. Any advice, please? Thank you, George

Is there any way I can use a different email service and still keep my present email address?

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