Government spyware is another reason to use an ad blocker | TechCrunch
Shoshana Zuboff, a scholar and activist, calls this model “surveillance capitalism”; it’s a system in which users’ online movements and actions are tracked and that information is sold to advertisers. The more time people spend online, the more money companies can make, so our attention is incessantly pulled to digital screens to be monitored and m
... See moreEthan Zuckerman • Building a More Honest Internet - Columbia Journalism Review
sari added
Many gangs still operate in Russia and Ukraine, though ransomware hubs have emerged in Iran, Brazil, India, North Korea, China and Peru. Some hackers seem to work independently, like pirates. Others appear to have links to their country’s government, or at least a licence to harass Western companies as long as they don’t cause so much harm that the... See more
Amanda Chicago Lewis • Secrets of a ransomware negotiator
MargaretC added
“Any information that’s gathered on you, if it’s not sold by you or you don’t authorize it is theft” – John Robb
James Beshara • Below the Line with James Beshara on Apple Podcasts
sari added
reaches here can be almost impossible to detect, such as firmware backdoors being used to install malicious programs and execute fraud campaigns on Android TV boxes.
Stephen Weigand • 2024 cybersecurity forecast: Regulation, consolidation and mothballing SIEMs
MargaretC added
Web 3 will have ads too. It already does in fact, they’re called NFT or token drops (essentially, giveaways that exploit the ability to send to any wallet). Not only do we have ads, we have ads fraud. When Optimism, a Level 2 chain that tries to make transacting cheaper, announced their token drop, thousands of fake users signed up to ‘farm’ the dr... See more
Antonio Garcia Martinez • Everything is an ad network
Joey DeBruin added