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Protecting your Facebook privacy at work isn’t just about passwords

Protecting your Facebook privacy at work isn’t just about passwords

Here’s a podcast of my last Guardian column, Protecting your Facebook privacy at work isn’t just about passwords: Facebook has threatened to sue companies that force their employees to reveal their Facebook login details. As laudable as this is, I worry that it will fail to accomplish its primary objective – protecting Facebook users from... more

Podcast – Cory Doctorow's craphound.com

April 16, 2012

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Show Notes

Here’s a podcast of my last Guardian column, Protecting your Facebook privacy at work isn’t just about passwords:

Facebook has threatened to sue companies that force their employees to reveal their Facebook login details. As laudable as this is, I worry that it will fail to accomplish its primary objective – protecting Facebook users from employer snooping.

Increasingly, firms configure the computers and devices on their internal networks to trust “self-signed certificates”. These cryptographic certificates are the same files used by your browser to establish secure, eavesdropping-proof connections to websites and to validate software updates, and to generally validate the identity of remote machines and guard the files they send you from tampering and spying.

Mastering by John Taylor Williams: [email protected]

John Taylor Williams is a full-time self-employed audio engineer, producer, composer, and sound designer. In his free time, he makes beer, jewelry, odd musical instruments and furniture. He likes to meditate, to read and to cook.

MP3 Link

Topics

sciencefictionstoriesaudiobooksfcorydoctorowdoctorow