{"id":5529,"date":"2023-06-09T10:56:44","date_gmt":"2023-06-09T10:56:44","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/forest-1041a2.ingress-bonde.ewp.live\/online-privacy-issues-need-to-be-easier-to-understand\/"},"modified":"2023-06-09T10:56:44","modified_gmt":"2023-06-09T10:56:44","slug":"online-privacy-issues-need-to-be-easier-to-understand","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/benrmatthews.local\/online-privacy-issues-need-to-be-easier-to-understand\/","title":{"rendered":"Online Privacy Issues Need to be Easier to Understand"},"content":{"rendered":"

"Online<\/p>\n

Online privacy issues are currently difficult to understand. Amid media headlines about NSA, Prism and Snowden, terms such as encryption, Tor and HTTPS are used extensively with the average person expected to keep up \u00a0with what they mean and understand how the issues affect them.<\/p>\n

For people who aren’t technically adept, the message about why\u00a0<\/em>online privacy should be an important issue to you is not getting across. Beyond saying that Facebook and Google are bad because they are free and sell data about you to advertisers, this isn’t compelling enough reason to find out more about how the services that they use every day affect their online privacy (no matter how ignorant that might seem to those who are technically adept).<\/p>\n

Yes, most people probably don’t care that much about their online privacy. Yes, most people would rather use services like Facebook for free and have ads served to them. But for those who do care about the issues and value their online privacy, it is hard to see how people can take practical, actionable steps that will help educate them about the issues at hand and what steps to take to so something’s about it.<\/p>\n

At the moment, we have a few extremes. There is the Richard Stallman approach to computing, which is both technically difficult for the average person to implement, but also extremely impractical on a day to say basis.<\/p>\n

The next steps down from are still relatively obtrusive to the everyday Internet user: download and connect to the Tor network, encrypt your email and hard drive, use alternatives to the mainstream services you know and love. Why bother when Google Chrome is so fast, all my friends are on Facebook and I need to use Skype to call my parents?<\/p>\n

The Electronic Frontier Foundation in the US and the Open Rights Group in the UK have brought further public attention to the issue by running a series of small campaigns to educate people about the issues. Just to mention a few:<\/p>\n