Game Addresses College Privacy Concerns
Thanks to Wired News for their article discussing a new game that's teaching new college students about protecting their privacy. The Flash game, created by Privacy Activism and called Carabella Goes To College, "is about finding the right balance between privacy and convenience", as the player will "...find information about ways to protect yourself against threats like identity theft and consumer profiling." The Wired article says that the game "occasionally lapses into exaggeration", although events portrayed "have happened before" in some form, such as the based-on-real-life incident in which "Carabella receives an e-mail message from a prisoner named Mike (the Dagger) who said he wrote her after processing her order. He wants to see her when he gets out of jail."
" Since when is consumer profiling an invasion of privacy? If it wasn't for businesses and consumers, the system wouldn't work."
Customer profiling became an invasion of privacy when the US PATRIOT act passed. Any commercial database is just as bad as a government ran one because they're forced to hand over any database when asked, and its a felony to refuse or to even tell someone you handed it over.
"And guess what kids, if we're able to read Slashdot, the system isn't that bad."
How long before reading slashdot automaticly marks us a 'possible hackers'?
Pain lasts, kid. Its how you know you're alive. Sometimes I think this growing up thing is just pain management-TheMaxx