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1/15/2020 0 Comments

Privacy Prompt 2: Change One High Risk Account to a Strong, Unique Password

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Last week you learned about high-risk accounts and created a list of them. This week's task is to change your password on one of them to a strong, unique password (here's everything you ever needed to know about passwords). You can change more than one of course, but let's start small. The first one is the most challenging because it's not just about changing the password. You also should come up with a way to generate a strong, unique password that you'll be able to remember.

That's the challenge, isn't it?  One way to do it is to install a password manager and have it generate the password. There are pros and cons to this technique which we'll discuss in a future prompt.  This week I'm going to teach you a method for developing strong, unique, and memorable passwords.


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1/8/2020 0 Comments

Privacy Prompt 1: Track Your Accounts

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sensitive_websites.xlsx
File Size: 11 kb
File Type: xlsx
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Privacy and security are closely related. You know that having strong passwords is important to good privacy. Click here to see why passwords are so important. This week's prompt is pretty simple:

Create a list of every high-risk website, account, or app with which you have an account that requires a password. It can be on paper, a Word doc, Excel, wherever. If you want to be super private, make a Word doc and password protect it. I have provided a simple Excel spreadsheet to start you out (which you can also password protect).


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1/2/2020 0 Comments

Passwords: Links & Articles

Here are some interesting and helpful links & articles about passwords:
  • Check out my post on Passwords & Dual-Factor Authentication


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1/1/2020 0 Comments

Opting Out

Notice and Consent

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What gives Data Brokers and businesses like Facebook the right to collect our data?

According them, we do.

Opting Out
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1/1/2020 0 Comments

Privacy-Mindedness

Businesses use all sorts of technologies to try to collect information about you, but one of the easiest ways they can collect information is by just asking you. All the technologies in the world won’t protect your privacy if you give away sensitive information that you could have kept to yourself.

Here is a list of behaviors that you will want to think about, online and offline, to protect your privacy.
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Privacy-Mindedness
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1/1/2020 0 Comments

Passwords & Dual-Factor Authentication

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By now, you are probably well aware of the need to password protect your accounts and devices. Most now require password protection, though it wasn’t always that way. However, despite the constant admonition to use a “strong” password and to follow certain guidelines, many people still fail to do so.

Passwords & Dual-Factor Authentication
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1/1/2020 0 Comments

Protect Yourself Checklist

I am often asked "How can I protect my privacy?" I teach a whole class on this at UVM. This is the comprehensive list of all the ways you could protect your privacy. Some of these might require more information, and I will be adding additional resources in the days to come.

How you protect your privacy is up to you, and you might not want to do all of these things. Items in bold are things that everyone should do, the others depend on how far you want to go with your privacy.
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Protect Yourself Checklist
File Size: 234 kb
File Type: pdf
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4/8/2019 0 Comments

Regulators Should Rethink 'Reasonable Data Security'

This article originally appeared in Law360.

Your data is valuable — in the wrong hands it exposes you to identity theft, fraud and privacy violations. If a business collects your data, they are expected to prevent that data from being lost, stolen or wrongfully accessed. We call this legal requirement “reasonable data security.”
 
This might all seem obvious, but we must remind ourselves of first principles as we worry about data breaches, vendors that sell insecure software, and vendors that are entrusted with sensitive employee, customer or student data. It can be easy to get lost in the weeds, but the ultimate goal of the regulators is not to police data security — it is to protect consumers.

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    All Consumer Help Data Security Dual-Factor Authentication Guidance Links & Articles My Writing Passwords Privacy Privacy Prompt

    Author

    Ryan Kriger is an Assistant Attorney General for the State of Vermont. He writes on privacy and data security and  teaches about privacy, consumer protection and policy at the University of Vermont.

    These materials are my personal work product developed as a university lecturer and do not reflect the policies or priorities of the Vermont Attorney General. These materials do not constitute legal advice.

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