Security questions should be treated in a same way as passwords, because all in all your information can be packaged and sold OR exposed during a breach. So if you answered your mothers maiden name with it's full accuracy some one can make a connection. World will get weirder so it's better be prepared. When you asked for answers to security question, generate random 20 characters string and store it in your password manager, just like your passwords.

theshamblog.com/an-ai-agent-pu

As a free software maintainer, this is entirely unacceptable. Now I have to spend time figuring out how to tell AI agents to *fuck off* so I don't have to deal with this.

How tech giants track you across the web, even if you don't use their apps

Ad tech giants use near-invisible "pixels" on web pages to track what you do online, even if you don't have an account or use their apps. Thankfully, there is a solution.

this.weekinsecurity.com/how-te

Here is an interesting findings I was able to decipher from iPhone's privacy report: several messaging apps explicitly attempting to use well known DNS servers by IP, I wonder why? Would that be because they can't serve ads? Section with explicit IP addresses keep on giving. Bottom line you need to understand where your data is flowing to be able to protect it.

This is last post in series covering iPhone privacy settings. I'd like to point out to a very neat feature - reports that your phone can build, based on description those are suppose to be on device reports. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security and scroll to Transparency Log section and turn ON both App Privacy Report and Apple Intelligence Report. Those reports will help audit where your data is going, you can always ask friend for analysis.

There is a section in privacy settings on iPhone titled Security. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security scroll down to Security section. My recommendation there to set Wired Accessories to either Always Ask or Ask for New Accessories, to make sure when something plugged into your phone it'll notify you. Also keep Background Security Improvements as on to make sure you always receive latest security updates.

Two "no brainer" privacy settings that you still need to check, especially if you decided to enable those at some point. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security locate Analytics & Improvements and Apple Advertising. Go inside of each of these settings and make sure that every option is off there. This will ensure that your information is not being used to improve some systems and no you do not need personalized ads.

Safety Check is a privacy feature to understand holistically what information you are sharing and who you sharing it with. It can also help to limit exposure by quickly resetting all of your sharing settings. I am not going to explain emergency reset, let's just focus on review. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security -> Safety Check. Click Manage Sharing & Access. Go through wizard and review information you are sharing, take action if needed.

Let's talk about privacy of various capabilities linked to physical sensors on your iPhone. There is a special section in settings where you can decide which apps get access to those capabilities. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security, then scroll past "Wallet" option. You'll see Accessories, Bluetooth, Camera, etc. Go inside each option and ensure that only apps that you expect have access to each particular capability(number represent how many apps).

Let's talk about privacy in section that responsible for standard smartphone capabilities, like Calendar, Contacts, Photos, etc. List is much longer. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security, then scroll past "Tracking" and in next section go into each capability and grant access based on your needs. There are 3 options, None, Limit access(you select items) or Full Access. Avoid giving full access, limit as much as possible.

Just in time before icemagedon package from BlackHills arrived with this compact guide. Time to review what's inside with a cup of hot beverage.

One feature I really miss on LinkedIn is the ability to set an expiration date for posts.

As a user, I don’t want to see event announcements or conference invites weeks after they’ve already happened. The date has passed, the opportunity is gone—and yet the post is still in my feed. What’s the point?

Time-sensitive content should disappear or be archived automatically. It would make everyone’s feed more relevant and much less cluttered.

Going to #FOSDEM and interested in #Phosh? @devrtz will give a talk on Saturday 16:30 in the FOSS on Mobile devroom (UB4.132) and there'll be devices running Phosh in UD1 at the #linuxonmobile and @postmarketOS booths.

#linuxmobile

Today's story is about tracking across devices and apps. iPhone has a setting that allows apps to request to track you across multiple channels and unfortunately it's ON by default. Time to turn it off. Go to Settings-> Privacy & Security-> Tracking and turn off top toggle that says Allow Apps to Request to Track, also go through all the apps on the list there and make sure it's off for all of them.

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