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Protect Your Privacy

Information is Searchable Online

Before the advent of the Internet, the privacy of many types of "public" information was protected by the effort required to access it. Now it can be accessed and also combined with other data that can make it much more important or even dangerous. For example you can search on the Internet for birthdays, addresses, maps and driving directions, aerial photos, a mother's maiden name, and many other types of information.

Searchers can get assistance from online companies to do background research and retrieve detailed information about an individual's assets (cars, boats, bank accounts etc.), auto tags, motor vehicle records, court actions, criminal records (felony & misdemeanor), death records, divorce, investments (stocks, bonds, mutual funds, etc.), marriages, phone number traces, real estate, and much, much more.

Specific Technology Issues

Cyberstalking

Publishing photographs — especially with directory or other information about a person's location or schedule — could facilitate harassment or even lead to serious danger, especially if website access is not restricted, but is open to the general public.

Anonymity

The ability to send email without identifying yourself is considered essential by many Internet users, especially for discussions of sensitive personal or medical topics. Libraries are particularly concerned about protecting the privacy of their public access workstation facility users. However, there are concerns about allowing some types of anonymous messages, such as credible threats of harm. Defining the appropriate terms and conditions for online anonymity is an ongoing debate. Anonymity on the Internet Must be Protected, a paper by Karina Rigby of MIT, provides a good outline of the issues.

Identity Theft

Identity theft occurs when someone hijacks a consumer's personal identifying information - name, address, credit card or Social Security number - and uses the data to open new charge accounts, order merchandise, or borrow money. See Identity Theft information from the California Office of Privacy Protection.

Cookies

Statistics on what web pages are accessed by whom ("cookies") are readily collected by those who run the websites. Such information is very valuable to commercial companies who can create contact lists to sell specific types of products or services. See Penn's Cookie Page. Closely related to cookies are "web bugs".

Web Bugs

A web bug is a graphic on a web page or in an email message that is designed to monitor who is reading it. The graphic is often invisible. See the Privacy Foundation's Web Bug FAQ.

Website Contact Addresses

To protect an individual person's email address from receiving harassing email, post a generic contact address such as "webmaster". Aside from viewers who might harass an individual whose address is posted, automated "web crawler" programs search the Internet to create lists of email addresses associated with websites, often for targeting unsolicited email messages. See Protecting your website's email addresses from being used by spammers.

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