Related News: HealthCare.gov Sends Personal Data to Dozens of Tracking Websites

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Gizmodo published an article titled HealthCare.gov Sends Personal Data to Dozens of Tracking Websites.

EFF researchers have independently confirmed that healthcare.gov is sending personal health information to at least 14 third party domains, even if the user has enabled Do Not Track. The information is sent via the referrer header, which contains the URL of the page requesting a third party resource. The referrer header is an essential part of the HTTP protocol, and is sent for every request that is made on the web. The referrer header lets the requested resource know what URL the request came from. This would for example let a website know who else was linking to their pages. In this case however the referrer URL contains personal health information.

Source: Gizmodo

Related News: Poachers Can Use Your Geotagged Safari Photos To Hunt Down Rhinos

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Gizmodo published an article titled Poachers Can Use Your Geotagged Safari Photos To Hunt Down Rhinos.

Oof, here’s one unexpected negative effect of ubiquitous smartphones—a sign asking people to turn off geotagging when they take pictures of endangered rhinos so that poachers can’t figure out where they are.

The photo started making its way across the internet after it was posted by Eleni de Wet, who owns a branding and marketing company in Johannesburg, South Africa. Sure, that means there might be some kind of marketing spin on the photo, but it’s also indicative of a larger problem: poachers are using technology to help them find and kill endangered species. So that Instagram photo you snapped on a tourist safari? It might be helping poachers actually hunt those animals.

Source: Gizmodo

Related News: 4.6 Million Snapchat User Names and Phone Numbers Leaked (Check Yours)

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Gizmodo published an article titled 4.6 Million Snapchat User Names and Phone Numbers Leaked (Check Yours).

The leaked user info from SnapchatDB matches phone numbers to user names, and was in retrospect probably inevitable. Just a week ago, a group of researchers calling themselves Gibson Security not only publicized how easy it would be to acquire data like this from Snapchat, but detailed how one might go about doing it. And so someone has!

Source: Gizmodo

Related News: Facebook Wants Your Phone Number

One new article link has been added to our Related News page. Gizmodo published an article titled Facebook Wants Your Phone Number.

As part of a new security initiative, Facebook wants your phone number. It claims that it will help you recover your account in the event of an emergency—but should you hand it over?

Source: Gizmodo