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Old 03-11-2012, 10:38 AM
baultista baultista is offline
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Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Toronto
Posts: 20
10 yr Member
baultista baultista is offline
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Mar 2012
Location: Toronto
Posts: 20
10 yr Member
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I own a domain name and have been in the process of migrating from my GMail account to my domain e-mail account. It's tough though. The majority of my non-work e-mails these days are updates from Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, or some other kind of account I have. Other times it's invoices for online services that I use.

Very rarely do I get a "personal" e-mail any more, since my generation uses all different types of services for personal communication.



Quote:
Originally Posted by Jo*mar View Post
I happened to be listening to Glen Beck while driving to the store this morning, he was on the soap box about Google too.

But I'm sure many of the other big name search engines collect some sort of data and store it for whatever use they want...
Theoretically they can track any data that comes through their system. If you do not have an account registered they can track your IP address/hostname and whatever you search. If you are logged in to your Google account they can additionally link that search to your account. Bing.com, Yahoo.com... they can all do the same. Of course they have a tremendous volume of information so it's difficult to know whether or not they do (I assume they do given their resources and infrastructure). What they do with this data is up to them, but is usually clearly stated in their privacy policy.

Their privacy policy highlights what they can and can't use your data to do. With targets ads for example, authorized third parties don't have direct access to your data but can still use your data to target advertisements to you. They go through what's called an Application Interface that allows Google to redirect content (IE advertisements on your Google Search or above your Gmail inbox) without allowing them to ever view or store your data.

Quote:
I like that with the duckduckgo you can use the drop down menu (next to the search button) to search anon and still access google & bing & youtube etc...
They *can* track your data if they want to, but they state in their privacy policy that they do not. It's a good solution if you're paranoid about Google, but you shouldn't be unless you have extremely sensitive information going through their systems.


Quote:
For email , I'm pretty sure Thunderbird is more secure than Outlook or outlook express. but I haven't researched on it for ages, been a fan of Mozilla/Tbird and never went back to Outlook Express.

I just prefer having my saved emails & addresses stored on my home computer and not on some email website online.
This is somewhat of a misconception. Remember that any e-mail going through the e-mail server can be unpacked and read. As for your sent e-mails... a local copy *is* stored on your computer, but you should check with your service provider to see if they aren't also caching stored e-mails on the server. If you can sync your e-mail to multiple applications (IE run it through Outlook *and* Thunderbird, or access it on multiple computers) and still see all of your sent e-mails then yes, your e-mails are also stored on the e-mail server.


It is pretty dangerous when a personality like Glenn Beck hops on the radio and spews misinformation or paints an incomplete picture to send people into mass hysteria.
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"Thanks for this!" says:
Lara (03-11-2012)