by Outcast_Searcher » Thu 29 Jun 2017, 22:27:48
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('Ibon', 'C')ultivate a cyber presence that is sanitized for those who do the surveillance. Save your deepest darkest secrets for the analog world.
IMO, it's not just the surveillance state that makes privacy important.
How about malware, identity theft (which malware Trojan Horses could help allow), actual risk to your online financial accounts (again, and now the malware is getting really scary).
Recently I've been messing with Windows XP because ... I LOVE GAMES, especially old classic games. (It may make me a big geek, but at least playing games doesn't hurt anything aside from consuming a bit of electricty).
And, as I was researching how to get XP and games working on a modern PC, via virtualization technology like VirtualBox, I watched various tutorial videos on Youtube, and chased down a lot of shady references/recommendations (that superficially could have been benign). And it dawned on me that:
1). A HUGE proportion of people out there don't want to pay for a legit Windows license, and are willing to steal it. Even if this means having to risk all sorts of nasty malware exposure. And remember -- with no updates from MS for the ordinary user and few companies supporting it much as far as anti-virus, etc., that's EXTRAORDINARILY dangerous for the folks that have to be connected to the internet all the time.
2). IMO, after chasing down some things, MANY of the "helpful" people doing tutorials about how to illegally install Windows software (via downloading dangerous tools to help them steal it, etc) are just massively distributing malware. Just blatantly. Oh, and it's easy to pick up a perfectly legal, new OEM Windows XP on EBAY for under 30 bucks. I just installed one today. They buy them in quantity when PC distributors leave the business. The only drawback is one installation per physical machine. (Not sure how enforcable that will be with virtualization, especially if Windows XP licenses get rare.)
3). Well, people can have fun with that. I'll pass. I will ONLY run XP on a virtual machine with networking completely disabled, or on a physical PC where I have stopped any connection with WIFI, etc. Period. (You can get lots of 10ish year old PC's with XP, many refurbished by quality vendors CHEAP (like under $100 bucks, or under $200 if you want something fancy, a long warranty, and lots of hand-holding) off of places like EBAY, or even Amazon marketplace, if you don't want to fiddle with software virtualization or don't like all the tweaking you have to do to make it work well.
...
I saw so much bad stuff in less than a week that I got an idea for a science fiction story. "Skynet" or something of that ilk doesn't have to be death-dealing robots. It can be just massive malware distribution, set up on a subtle time bomb and buried deeply in free and cheap executables that we "just have to have". And "give" them to the masses, and chuckle and wait.
It waits and watches and then when the time is right, BAM -- 90% plus of critical computers in places like hospitals, various businesses, peoples' homes, the utilities, the government and on and on, quit working. And when the competent IT staff recovers them, BAM -- due to the date, or various switches turned by other malware, or whatever -- they just mess up AGAIN, because the malware is spread pervasively along many channels, for a long time. Almost no one is safe. The sheep have done it to themselves.
And once it sees the malware is working well, then a cascade of other malware, taking down financial markets, messing up transportation, and on and on keep falling like dominos. And then the sheep totally panic and destroy the system themselves. Like the "The Monsters are Due on Maple Street" Twilight Zone episode, except this time the problems are real and highly pervasive, and the hits just keep on coming.
Doomer porn for sure. This is just fiction of course -- but with the way young (and older ignorant) people behave with computers, our society is just ASKING for big trouble at some point. Don't like Skynet? How about terrorists in their cells or just unhappy geeks doing this while they spend their time in social isolation?
Given the track record of the perma-doomer blogs, I wouldn't bet a fast crash doomer's money on their predictions.