Fraud protection or privacy intrusion?
All the new Web browsers comes with built-in phishing protection. The way these operates is by checking the URLs you are visiting with centralized black-lists, and then warn you if they either suspect something or have the current site on their black lists.
Opera 9.1 has it, Internet Explorer 7 has it, Firefox 2 has it… But is this not a privacy intrusion more than consumer protection?
I think it is my internet service provider's job to check and make these black-lists. I do not need yet another party to know about all the URLs I visit. Seriously! That consumer information
is valuable, of course. But it is also my life, my habits and my own damn consumption habits!
Personally I have disabled my browser's phishing filtering as my DNS provider also checks for suspected phishing activities when I do the domain lookup. Sound interesting? Their name is OpenDNS and they are nice guys, providing really fast and secure DNS services.
Copyright © 2007 Daniel Aleksandersen 2007-02-14 at 02:02
« Fruits of wishful thinking | Home | Emailing lists are spam traps »- Printer identification dots
- How to: Configuring for OpenDNS (changing DNS)
- License conditions for entries
- Leaving Facebook
- Online privacy, a joke?
- Instant communication and the lack of privacy
- Google Desktop Search for Linux available today
Get a free subscription to new entries in the Open Source Notebook!
Runbox
- 10 GB email storage,
- 1 GB file storage,
- 100 MB attachment limit,
- your own domain,
...and more! Get your own premium email for just 49 USD per year!
Categories- Communication (24)
- Conquering the Command Line (12)
- Gadgets (13)
- K Desktop Environment (25)
- Multimedia (23)
- Online Privacy (9)
- Open Formats (24)
- Reviews (6)
- Shape of the World (28)
- Software (25)
- Ubuntu and Debian Watch (12)
- User Interface (26)
- Your Rights! (8)
The archive keeps a record of all entries that have ever been published! Have a look back in time, and see what was going on!
LicenseThis blog entry text is licensed under a Creative Commons Sampling Plus 1.0 License. The license explained, and legal notes.

Leave your comment