Privacy Software

If you want to keep your work private, encryption is essential. Who is abusing your affairs? Advertisers are one answer. Governments are another, so are the wonderful people at Microsoft. See more at #Enemies of Privacy. There are answers. You need firewalls and virus checkers [see Software Sources for those ]. Here are my choices in a wicked world.

GPG 
GNU Privacy Guard
or GPG is an encryption system which has taken over from
 #PGP [ Pretty Good Privacy ] it was a great system, which kept data secret from every intruder with the possible exception of major government espionage operations like the NSA. The NSA were exposed as a bad tempered bunch of criminals by Edward Snowden but that is another theme.

PGP failed as encryption for the masses because people would not learn to use it. Given that so many of them use Facebook, Twitter et cetera you have to think a lot just do not care.

PGP started as open source then became closed source. Secret coding means that back doors could be built in. But now we have GNU Privacy Guard. It is open source so if you are a real programmer you can check the source code for yourself. Get it from http://www.gnupg.org/ It is the way forward. Use it or lose it.

 

PGP
PGP is short for Pretty Good Privacy and the name tells you what you need to know. PGP keeps your email private from any one prying. The American Government was so pleased by this approach to keeping speech free and private that they tried to put the author, Phil Zimmermann in prison.

The effectiveness is all that you need unless a major nation's government is after you. Version 6.5.8 is the last which came with publicly available source code. This means that it can be checked by anyone who can read C or C++. Later versions are not always trusted by the sincerely paranoid. The price/performance ratio is satisfactory. Phil gave it to us for free. Later versions can cost you money.

It turns out that Robert Hanssen, an American traitor used PGP to send messages to the KGB but they could not cope with this level of sophistication back in 1985. He is doing life.

 

Quicksilver
If you want to send email anonymously QS is the answer. It encrypts your message using PGP and sends it to an anonymous remailer. There a layer of encryption is stripped off and it is sent on to the next remailer where another layer is stripped off. It then goes to its final destination. This is a high degree of anonymity. It is possible to add in more remailers but the reliability falls off rapidly. It depends on how important it is to you and any potential adversaries. You send multiple copies automatically. Three legs and three copies gives good anonymity and fairly good reliability.

 

 

Hestia Security
Hestia also does free software.

 

Javacool Software Blaster
SpywareBlaster 3.2 is popular

Spyware Doctor 2.1
QUOTE
This top-rated spyware remover includes a superfast scanning engine, real-time OnGuard protection, and an advanced immunization system. Remove infections for free.

UNQUOTE
Get it from download.com

 

Computer Security
This is advice from a real expert. Bruce Schneier wrote the books.

 

 


Enemies of Privacy

Skim Links
Is there to tell the advertisers which of their offerings gets the clicks. It doesn't say that it logs the punter's address as a way of spying on him to target him with more ads but it does. Search for "gonorrhoea" and see what keeps arriving in your email for evermore. The fact that you were researching Kennedy and his hobby, fornication is neither here not there.

 

Salsa Labs ex Wiki
Salsa Labs, Inc.
is a Bethesda, Maryland-based software as a service (SaaS) company that provides nonprofit online advocacy, donor management, fundraising, and marketing tools.

It was founded as a nonprofit, DemocracyInAction.org (DIA), in 2003. Salsa Labs continues to provide nonprofits with tools to manage their supporters, fundraise, advocate, and communicate for their mission. WiredForChange.com (founded in 2005), a sister company, catered to political and 501(c)6 organizations until WiredForChange.com and DemocracyInAction.org united efforts and intentions by establishing Salsa Labs in 2007.

On August 1, 2011, Salsa Labs received a $5 million capital growth investment from the New Jersey-based investment firm, Edison Ventures.[1]

In October 2014, Salsa Labs acquired social fundraising and events platform, Givezooks!.[2]

In November 2015, Salsa Labs merged with leading donor management platform, DonorPro. [3]

Salsa Labs empowers more than 3,000 organizations and their 92 million supporters, members, donors, activists, and fans all around the world. The company also offers strategic best practices, training, award winning support and an online user community.

 

 

 

Errors & omissions, broken links, cock ups, over-emphasis, malice [ real or imaginary ] or whatever; if you find any I am open to comment.

Email me at Mike Emery. All financial contributions are cheerfully accepted. If you want to keep it private, use my PGP KeyHome Page

Updated on Friday, 15 December 2023 14:12:35