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Yahoo Changes Privacy Agreement
Yahoo email ^ | April 17, 2018 | Econjack

Posted on 04/17/2018 7:35:57 PM PDT by econjack

[Yahoo has] updated how we collect and use data.

We’ve updated some of the ways we collect and analyze user data in order to deliver services, content, and relevant advertising to you and protect against abuse. This includes: Analyzing content and information (including emails, instant messages, posts, photos, attachments, and other communications) when you use our services. This allows us to deliver, personalize and develop relevant features, content, advertising and services

Linking your activity on third-party sites and apps with information we have about you

(Excerpt) Read more at yahoo.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; Miscellaneous; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: internet; privacy; tech; yahoo
This seems to say that Yahoo not only can read your emails, it can use that information as it sees fit. Recently, my mail is trying to get me to agree to this. I won't.
1 posted on 04/17/2018 7:35:57 PM PDT by econjack
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To: econjack

Bookmark.


2 posted on 04/17/2018 7:42:03 PM PDT by Inyo-Mono
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To: econjack

They are years behind Google on this.

Even my @rollingstones.com email address will do the same. As will all “free” email services.

That’s how they make their money.

Targeted advertising.


3 posted on 04/17/2018 7:54:58 PM PDT by Mariner (War Criminal #18)
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To: econjack

If a company gives you something for free,
should you complain about the quality?


4 posted on 04/17/2018 8:04:24 PM PDT by Repeal The 17th (I was conceived in liberty, how about you?)
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To: econjack

This has been going on in the past. they are just now coming clean on it.


5 posted on 04/17/2018 8:07:28 PM PDT by BipolarBob (All governments suffer a recurring problem: Power attracts pathological personalities.)
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To: Repeal The 17th
If a company gives you something for free, should you complain about the quality?

It depends on the "free" price. If they can use my personal information in unspecified ways, yes, I should complain.

6 posted on 04/17/2018 8:10:05 PM PDT by econjack
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To: econjack

Seems to be a common ‘privacy agreement’ among many of the email/app services, of late.

“We may collect information, that we ‘may’ share with other entities.”


7 posted on 04/17/2018 8:10:26 PM PDT by Jane Long (Praise God, from whom ALL blessings flow.)
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To: Repeal The 17th

The quality stinks and IT”S NOT FREE!


8 posted on 04/17/2018 8:14:15 PM PDT by adorno
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To: adorno

??? how much do you pay yahoo ???


9 posted on 04/17/2018 8:21:17 PM PDT by Repeal The 17th (I was conceived in liberty, how about you?)
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To: econjack

If you’re using something that’s “free”, YOU are the product!


10 posted on 04/17/2018 8:32:09 PM PDT by Don W (When blacks riot, neighbourhoods and cities burn. When whites riot, nations and continents burn.)
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To: Mariner

“That’s how they make their money.

Targeted advertising.”

Of course. What astounds me is how so many people are suddenly surprised and shocked when they learn that the makers of the software they are getting for FREE are mining their data to make money off advertising. They are all doing this.


11 posted on 04/17/2018 9:09:01 PM PDT by plain talk
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To: plain talk

There’s mining data, and then there’s mining e-mails.


12 posted on 04/17/2018 9:45:34 PM PDT by lepton ("It is useless to attempt to reason a man out of a thing he was never reasoned into"--Jonathan Swift)
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To: econjack

This is Yahoo.!

Our new Privacy agreement is named “OATH”

We hereby promise you absolutely no privacy forevermore.

We realize we still can’t read your mail from your actual mailbox on the street - yet - but we’re working on it.

That is our solemn oath.


13 posted on 04/17/2018 10:02:03 PM PDT by maine-iac7 ( Christian is as Christian does mt-h)
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To: econjack

https://www.theverge.com/2018/4/14/17237864/oath-aol-yahoo-email-privacy-terms-scan-ads

https://www.cnet.com/news/yahoo-aol-oath-privacy-policy-verizon-emails-messages/


14 posted on 04/17/2018 11:02:37 PM PDT by TEXOKIE
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To: Repeal The 17th

yes


15 posted on 04/18/2018 12:30:11 AM PDT by Enchante (FusionGPS "dirty dossier" scandal links Hillary, FBI, CIA, Dept of Justice... "Deep State" is real)
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To: Repeal The 17th

If the food you’ve been given is poisoned, you cannot complain about the toxic nature of it?


16 posted on 04/18/2018 4:54:04 AM PDT by a fool in paradise (Ads for Chappaquiddick warn of scenes of tobacco use. What about the hazards of drunk driving?)
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To: Repeal The 17th
??? how much do you pay yahoo ???

The same amount that I pay to ABC and CBS and NBC and FOX news and FOX network, and all the other stations that are "free".

With Yahoo, you have to be aware of and understand the statement about how "If it's free, you are the product".

It's like with government freebies, which are NOT fREE. Politicians come to depend on the dependents of that "free stuff", and the freeloaders pay them back.

So, how does Yahoo and AOL and HuffPo bring in billions in revenue to Verizon, if they're "free"?
17 posted on 04/18/2018 5:15:39 AM PDT by adorno
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To: econjack

Have just scanned the thread this morning, and we are well along the way of defining the problem WE ARE BEING HOSED.

Next step is to lay out and explore “What are the options?”

In my search this morning I ran across the following link:

https://freedomhacker.net/list-of-secure-email-providers-that-take-privacy-serious/

One thing that disturbs me is that they have an inset block containing words to the effect that FCC just got rid of “net neutrality.” Call congress and get them to give us net neutrality. So that leads me to conclude the people at this website are flaming liberals or deeply confused or both....nevertheless, this list MIGHT be of value.

Here is the article:

List of Secure Email Providers that take Privacy Serious

Here is a list of secure email providers that take your privacy serious and do not track you (* = recommended, last updated June 23, 2017):
save secure internet

ProtonMail (*) – Truly anonymous & end-to-end encrypted email
Tutanota (*) – Truly secure email with end-to-end encryption throughout the entire mailbox
Hushmail.com (* )- Canadian provider who has been respecting email privacy since 1999. Oldest secure email provider.
RiseUp.net (*) – Secure offshore email provider run by non-profit organization who fights for digital freedom.
TorGuard.net (*)
Blur/MaskMe – Solid email masking service, not a provider.
ShazzleMail
StartMail.com
CryptoHeaven.com
Autistici/Inventati
NeoMailBox.com
4SecureMail.com
CounterMail.cm
S-Mail.com
Securenym.net
Safe-Mail.net
KeptPrivate.com
Novo-Ordo.com
LockBin.com
SendINC.com – Sends encrypted emails, not actually a provider.
Opolis.eu
OneShar.es – Self destructing emails.
BitMessage.ch
Lavabit – Shut down as of August 2013 after Edward Snowden was found using the service and the FBI tried to spy on users.
SilentCircle.com – Email service shut down as of August 2013. All of their other services still work.
TorMail.org – Tor-based email service now dead after FBI server seizure.
The list of secure email providers above is a comprehensive list of privacy focused providers that has been vetted by our team of security experts. These are not big name providers or privacy-violators that can be found scattered across the front page of search engines and ads. If you don’t wish to switch email providers, we recommend you begin implementing some form of encryption, such as PGP.

Top 5 Secure Email Providers

1. Hushmail – Basic Secure Email with Privacy in Mind

Hushmail Secure Email One of the first-ever and longest lasting secure email providers on the market is Hushmail, whose been providing secure email since 1999. That’s right, 17 years as of the time of writing this article.

What sets Hushmail apart from other providers is that they own and operate all of their own servers, meaning your data is never sent or stored on a third-party server, it’s all in house. What is disappointing is that Hushmail still has access to users inbox, however they own their own servers, don’t scan emails, don’t datamine users, don’t snoop in others mailboxes and have easy one-click encryption!

Hushmail is packed with tons of features including automatic encryption, temporary email address, strict HTTPS and two-step verification. Through their last 17 years of service the provider has been forced by the Canadian government to turn over three users accounts, on one occasion in 2007. However Hushmail is built with the security, privacy and simplicity in mind, and it’s all free!

A huge reason we recommend Hushmail is for their tract record, 17 year veterans in email security. Often times today we will see these alleged “secure email providers” crumble after one legal request and nuke your mailbox, giving you no way to recover your email. This is something Hushmail won’t do, they are established and have designed a mailbox keeping your privacy in mind!

Get a free account here or upgrade to a premium plan and get $5 off with out special link here.

2. Tutanota – For All Your Encryption Needs

Privacy Email Tutanota Another secure email provider dominating the list is Tutanota, because it’s different in the fact that the entire mailbox is encrypted, email and contacts, all end-to-end encrypted only giving you access to your data. Even when Tutanota was forced by a German court order to turn over data, they could only hand over encrypted data, and had absolutely no way of reading or decrypting such information.

Tutanota is even unique in the fact that you can send end-to-end encrypted emails to any email provider via a shared password, making the email just as private even when contacting friends, family and business partners using mainstream providers like Gmail. By default, Tutanota automatically encrypts subject, body and attachments, something PGP does not do. With Tutanota’s relentless work they are working on an encrypted calendar this year, making this a a serious provider, not someone to close shop after one law enforcement request. And best of all, they don’t log any IP addresses and even strip IP addresses from the headers of sent and received emails.

We asked one of the Tutanota co-founders what makes their secure email different, Matthias Pfau told us:

Tutanota encrypts all data on the users device (end-to-end encryption)
Tutanota never stores unencrypted data on their servers, everything from mail to contacts is always encrypted
Tutanota makes encryption easy-to-use as key generation and key exchange is easily done in the background
Tutanota never uses the private keys of their users server-side
3. Shazzlemail – Locally Hosted Email in Your Pocket, No Third-Parties

locally hosted email One of the most secure emails on the market today is ShazzleMail, but this is because they are doing things differently. They are putting you back in the hands of your data, and we mean that quite literally. Instead of ShazzleMail hosting your content they’ve developed a way for your to be the server, meaning you store all your data locally and nothing ever passes through ShazzleMail.

It’s quite simple, you download the ShazzleMail app on your smartphone, setup and account and your all done. However one downside to ShazzleMail is since you are the server, uptime matters. This means if you are running it on a smartphone and it happens to loose battery, technically your server is offline, and now you have no way of receiving or reading your messages. However, the upside is that all data is locally hosted and technically never has to leave your servers, or if you’re messaging a provider like Tutanota, you don’t need to worry cause its going to another secure email.

If you’re tired of not knowing where your data is being stored, give ShazzleMail a try!

4. RiseUp – For All Your High-Security Activists Needs

Secure Email for Activists Another secure email service for activists and privacy-supporters if RiseUp, a Seattle-based digital collective that offers free security and anonymity tools. Born out of the need for email privacy, RiseUp provides a secure email solution with absolutely zero trackers and no censorship.

RiseUp was born and operated by a small collective of pro-privacy activists who have kept the service government free since 1999. Even after previous run-ins with law enforcement no data has ever been seized or read by any third-party or government entity.

While RiseUp offers great security they have one major downside in that it takes a support ticket and a few days to get an account. To start, you must first send in a support ticket requesting an email and telling them why you want one. You can be an activists, journalists, hacktivist or just plain privacy-lover and can easily be granted an account. After that its smooth and secure sailing!

5. Torguard – Encrypted Webmail with Privacy

Last on the list is Torguard, another secure email but this time developed by a leading VPN provider. Torguard’s anonymous email service is their latest additional to their privacy product arsenal, offering up a secure inbox. Torguard offers easy PGP email encryption, end to end security, zero advertisements and perfect forward secrecy.

While Torguard isn’t jam packed with features it serves as a pretty basic webmail with a couple of great apps and security in mind.

Optional) Blur/MaskMe – Abine, the company behind this wonderful browser plugin offers a free service known as Blur, formally known as MaskMe. The service allows you to easily mask your email address when entering it into websites. This means instead of giving a website your personal email you can mask it and Abine will give you a second email that will forward everything to your real email. This means if a website is shady, spammy or gets hacked, your real email is never in their hands, simply a masked version. And the best part is you can block these masked emails, so if the email starts getting spammed, simply block it and you won’t ever receive emails from it again. A great additional privacy tool!

Conclusion

After revelations uncovered that third-parties and governments have been spying on our email communications for years, the need for a secure email has never been more urgent. Privacy-conscious email providers has never been in higher demand. When you use a mainstream email provider that spies on its users, it doesn’t only hurt you, it affects everyone’s privacy. Your email address stores your interests, personal hobbies, daily activities, friends, family and thousands of other personal details, why let these big name providers take your privacy away?


18 posted on 04/18/2018 10:52:20 AM PDT by TEXOKIE
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*


19 posted on 04/18/2018 1:28:38 PM PDT by PMAS (All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is that good men do nothing)
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