Glenn Greenwald: Why privacy matters [TED talk]

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Some important quotes

Now, there’s all kinds of things to say about that mentality, the first of which is that the people who say that, who say that privacy isn’t really important, they don’t actually believe it, and the way you know that they don’t actually believe it is that while they say with their words that privacy doesn’t matter, with their actions, they take all kinds of steps to safeguard their privacy. [eg; Eric Schmidt, the CEO of Google and CEO of Facebook, Mark Zuckerberg]

Now, there’s a reason why privacy is so craved universally and instinctively. It isn’t just a reflexive movement like breathing air or drinking water. The reason is that when we’re in a state where we can be monitored, where we can be watched, our behavior changes dramatically. The range of behavioral options that we consider when we think we’re being watched severely reduce. This is just a fact of human nature that has been recognized in social science and in literature and in religion and in virtually every field of discipline.

society in which people can be monitored at all times is a society that breeds conformity and obedience and submission

What all of these seemingly disparate works recognize, the conclusion that they all reach, is that a society in which people can be monitored at all times is a society that breeds conformity and obedience and submission, which is why every tyrant, the most overt to the most subtle, craves that system. Conversely, even more importantly, it is a realm of privacy, the ability to go somewhere where we can think and reason and interact and speak without the judgemental eyes of others being cast upon us, in which creativity and exploration and dissent exclusively reside, and that is the reason why, when we allow a society to exist in which we’re subject to constant monitoring, we allow the essence of human freedom to be severely crippled.

Update: In early July 2015 it was announced that AshleyMadison, a cheating site, was hacked and data of users has been leaked or is being threatened of being leaked. In 2014, Gmail passwords were also leaked. And in 2013 data of 6 million users were leaked from Facebook. These are just a few examples.

Remember: NOTHING you put online is ever safe, No matter how secure systems are or how smart those are who built it. There will always be smarter people, smarter way, and new tools to de-cripple security systems. EVERYTHING you put online is there to stay.

Recommendations: If you care about the security of your accounts, and want to make them more secure, I sugges you use a password generator and manager software like KeePass and KeePassX or others (choose one that is local; I don’t trust online services like LastPass since they are equally hackable as other services). This way all you have to remember is one password.

For your convenience, use a browser with a password manager and master password like Firefox.

Also make sure to make most of your passwords at least 35-40 characters long (anything less is computationally crackable through brute-force attacks; also see Rainbow table).

Sugar is a toxin

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In a previous post “Sugar: Hiding in Plain Sight” I shared a TEDed video that explains how sugar is everywhere. It is found where you never expect to find it but is hiding under other names.

In this post I attempt to summarize some key points from a talk (starting at 40:37) by Robert H. Lustig, Professor of Pediatrics in the Division of Endocrinology at University of California San Francisco titled “Sugar: The Bitter Truth”. I also add some extra points or links. You can watch the one hour and thirty minutes talk at the end of this post.

At 13:50 the professor explains to the audience that coke [and pepsi] contains salt, a lot of it but you cannot taste it because the sweet taste of sugar is hiding it. Why salt? It makes you thirsty! And this makes you “consume” more.

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Theo Jansen: My creations, a new form of life (from plastic tubes) (TED 2007)

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website: http://www.strandbeest.com/

Central Limit Theorem, Rabits & Dragons

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Big data: predicting future city solutions, Rand Hindi, CEO Snips

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