Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Users are their own worst enemy...

Here is the results of a survey by Consumer Reports:


• A projected 1.7 million online households had experienced online identity theft in the past year.
• An estimated 5.4 million online consumers submitted personal information to e-mail (phishing) scammers during the past two years.
• Among adult social network users, 38 percent had posted their full birth date, including year. Forty-five percent of those with children had posted their children's photos. And 8% had posted their own street address.
• An estimated 5.1 million online households had experienced some type of abuse on a social network in the past year, including malware infections, scams, and harassment.

Here is the opinion of the author:

"
Businesses should have policies in place to govern the use of social networking on company computers or network resources. I don't recommend a complete ban per se, but users should be given boundaries regarding which social networks they can or can't visit, or the amount of time spent conducting personal business on social networking sites.

More importantly, users should be educated to raise awareness that seemingly innocuous information shared on the Web can still compromise security. For example, if you post on Facebook that you're astrology sign is Virgo, then you send out a Tweet about how you were born the same year that JFK was assassinated, then share a comment online that 28 is your lucky number because it's the date of your birthday, it is possible to combine all of those tidbits and derive that your birth date is August 28, 1963.

Similar deductions can be made regarding business-related data. As secretive as Apple is about its product development and launch dates, rumors are circulating that the iPhone 4.0 will be launched in June based on the fact that AT&T employees have shared that all vacation and discretionary time off for that month has been banned.
There is also peripheral risk of compromising information through family and friends. A company vice president may have the common sense not to post any details of an upcoming merger prior to the official announcement, but if that executive's spouse posts a Facebook status update alluding to a huge windfall, or new management others can still put two and two together."

Link

Thursday, April 29, 2010

Happiness Inventory

Podcasting

In my opinion, podcasting is the next generation of ham radio. It is audio used to relay a message on a topic of interest. The difference between Podcasting and Vodcasting is one is video (Video on Demand=vod) and one is audio.There are many advantages to using podcasting, including but not limitied to:

1. Preservation of content- Anything you make can be kept in perpetuity and redistributed as needed.
2. Proliferation of content- Once it is in a file format, a seemly infinite number of copies can be made and distributed to a wide audience.
3. Planning of content- Usually when something is recorded, there is more planning and thought given to production and thus some of the mistakes from spontaneity are reduced.


I am not sure to what extent I will be able to podcast in my room yet. Once I create a structured, standards-based curriculum, I would like to include podcasts to augment my curriculum.

Monday, March 15, 2010

Privacy is Not Dead, Just Evolving - PCWorld Business Center

Privacy is Not Dead, Just Evolving - PCWorld Business Center

This is an article about the changing definition of "privacy". We look at it as control over our information but the fact that we spread our information all over the web my indicate that we are giving up part of our rights to privacy. Read this and tell me what you think!

Tuesday, March 9, 2010

My Next Computer...

Bloom's Taxonomy- Revised


Blooms Digital Taxonomy

Old Taxonomy


AVID Web 2.0 Seminar

I went to seminar today about web 2.0. There were very interesting topics, much of which we have discussed in class. However, there were a few very interesting learning points:
1. Blooms Digital Taxonomy
2. PODcasting stands for- Personal On Demand broadcasting
3. Calaxy - Suite of tools free to schools