| The darker side of Webmail |
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Web-based e-mail is booming. Services such as Gmail, Yahoo Mail and Hotmail are convenient, accessible and, best of all, free. Many of us have come to rely on them without giving it a second thought.
But second thoughts may be in order, according to security experts, privacy advocates and some Webmail users. Few consider the fact that Webmail is inherently different than POP3 e-mail. It differs in who administers it and how, in the ways it may be vulnerable to hacking, and in the type of help you can expect when you have a problem. You may not think these differences matter. And they don't -- unless they end up biting you in the backside. For example, the most popular Webmail services are prime targets of malicious hackers. Some Webmail users run into mysterious technical problems that are never explained or solved. And most Webmail users never really know where their data is being stored or for how long -- or how well it is being safeguarded. How private is Webmail, really? When you click that box on the licensing agreement -- you know, the one you didn't read -- you're probably giving permission to use the personal information you entered when you signed up. For example, Google Inc.'s Privacy Policy specifically states that it collects personal information such as your name and e-mail address; it also collects information collected through your browser (such as which sites you visit) and from the text of your e-mails, which the provider uses to customize ads and conduct research.
Not too worried about that? Maybe you should be. "I believe individuals tend to forget that much of what they do online is being recorded," says Douglas. "This collection of information is all done behind the scenes; it's not visualized when individuals are using their computers." It can be shocking to realize how much about yourself you reveal on the Web, particularly when vendors combine information from your Webmail account with other Web 2.0 sites, such as online social networking platforms. "You start to leave a trail of information about yourself on the Internet," says Stephen Northcutt, president of the SANS Technology Institute. "Do you really want to get ads on burial plots because you drink, smoke and engage in unprotected sex?"
It was simple for the SANS Technology Institute to get a subpoena when it noticed a Gmail user was stealing its exam questions and posting them on the Internet, says Northcutt. People think that just because they don't use their real name or identifiable information in their e-mail sign-on -- using some obscure jumble of numbers and letters instead -- that no one can tie it back to them. "Of course, we can," says Northcutt. For example, an ISP can be subpoenaed to reveal the contact information that a person used when signing up for the account.
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