Don't Want NSA To Spy
On Your Email? 5 Things You Can Do
By Michael Liedtke
March 17, 2015 "ICH"
- "AP"
- SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — More than
half of Americans are worried about the
U.S. government's digital spies prying
into their emails, texts, search
requests and other online information,
but few are trying to thwart the
surveillance.
That's according to a new
survey from Pew Research Center,
released Monday. A main reason for the
inertia? Pew researchers found that a
majority of those surveyed don't know
about online shields that could help
boost privacy or believe it would be too
difficult to avoid the government's
espionage.
The poll questioned 475
adults from Nov. 26 to Jan. 3 — about a
year-and-a-half after confidential
documents leaked by former National
Security Agency contractor Edward
Snowden revealed the U.S. government has
been monitoring a broad range of online
communications for years as part of its
efforts to diffuse terrorist threats.
"It all boils down to
people sort of feeling like they have
lost control over their data and their
personal information," Mary Madden, a
senior researcher for Pew, told The
Associated Press. "But at the same time,
when we asked them if they would like to
do more, folks expressed that as an
aspirational goal."
Here are five steps you
can take to be more private online.
___
STEALTHY SEARCHING
Don't want a digital
dossier of your personal interests to be
stored and analyzed? Wean yourself from
the most popular search engines —
Google, Bing and Yahoo. All of them
collect and dissect your queries to
learn what kinds of products and
services might appeal to you so they can
sell advertising targeted to your
interests. Just because that trove of
data is meant to be used for commercial
purposes doesn't mean snoopers such as
the NSA couldn't vacuum up the
information, too, to find out more about
you. A small search engine called
DuckDuckGo has been gaining more fans
with its pledge to never collect
personal information or track people
entering queries on its site.
Just 10 percent of those
participating in Pew's survey said they
use a search engine that doesn't track
their searching history.
___
SCRAMBLE YOUR EMAIL
Encryption programs such
as Pretty Good Privacy, or PGP, can make
your email appear indecipherable to
anyone without the digital key to
translate the gibberish. This can help
prevent highly sensitive financial and
business information from getting swept
up by hackers, as well as a government
dragnet. Yet only 2 percent of the
people surveyed by Pew used PGP or other
email encryption programs. Part of the
problem: Encryption isn't easy to use,
as email recipients also need to use
encryption or leave their regular
inboxes to read messages.
___
CLOAK YOUR BROWSER
A privacy tool called
Blur, made by Abine, enables its users
to surf the Web without their activities
being tracked. It also masks passwords
and credit card information entered on
computers and mobile devices so they
can't be lifted from the databases of
the websites that collect them. Blur
charges $39 annually for this level of
protection. Privacy Badger from the
Electronic Frontier Foundation, a
digital rights group, offers a free way
to block tracking of browsing activity.
Only 5 percent of the Pew
respondents used these kinds of tools.
___
CUT OUT THE INTERNET
It might sound
old-school, but if you want to share
something really sensitive, meet face to
face. The Pew poll found 14 percent of
respondents are choosing to speak in
person more frequently rather than text,
email or talk on the phone because of
the Snowden revelations.
___
GET SMARTER
If you're looking to
become more literate about the ins and
outs of digital privacy, two of the most
comprehensive guides can be found
through the Electronic Frontier
Foundation's Surveillance Self-Defense
site, https://ssd.eff.org/en , and
https://prism-break.org/en/ .