Oct. 10th, 2014

thewayne: (Cyranose)
The woman in question was swept up in a drug bust, her house was being used by a gang for storage and trafficking, though she didn't get any great proceeds from it. She admitted responsibility, and as she had a very minor role in what went down Federal prosecutors recommended a light sentence and probation. She served several months of weekends in jail along with parole and the parole was eventually discharged.

Then a friend told her that she had some fairly racy pictures on Facebook. The only problem was the woman had never created a Facebook profile.

Enter an agent of the Drug Enforcement Agency. He copied photos from her seized cell phone, including some bikini shots and some shots of her posing on the hood of a BMW, and created a Facebook profile under her name. With it he talked to at least one drug dealer and tried to entire others. Oh, he also posted pix of her child and niece.

All without her permission or knowledge.

Yes, the lawsuits have begun, along with lots of tossing of potatoes of above ambient temperature among government agencies.

http://www.buzzfeed.com/chrishamby/government-says-federal-agents-can-impersonate-woman-online#2atkrww
thewayne: (Cyranose)
Not only is Adobe sending usage information on what you're reading back to their HQ, they also seem to be scanning your entire eBook library and reporting on that.

Not only that, but they're sending it in clear text: no encryption.

This has tremendous implications on libraries that have clear policies, if not laws, that this information is not to be shared. If Adobe is gathering it, they could be in some deep legal doodoo.

http://the-digital-reader.com/2014/10/06/adobe-spying-users-collecting-data-ebook-libraries/

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