As from today, ISPs are required to collect all your metadata. Time to get a VPN folks.
The Conversation
The Conversation
Hmmm where to start.Danscraftbeer said:They cant stop their highest security being hacked by uni students on the other side of the world. They cant even work out the nbn although I cant complain much about that its been pretty good, well not perfect etc and then the faster the internet the more monitoring whatever bandwidth consumption and it all turns to crashing anyhow.
Just what the hell can they do with all that data? and for what?
They've been able to monitor enough for terrorism so what the fark are they looking for in all that overwhelming amount of mostly first world trivial useless ********??? :unsure: Boggling.
This is the part that concerns me the most. We have already seen a good example last year, the governments own census website was hacked!neal32 said:The current government can't be trusted on the most mundane of issues let alone the safe keeping of australians collective data.
No it wasn't.. It was ddos'dScottyDoesntKnow said:This is the part that concerns me the most. We have already seen a good example last year, the governments own census website was hacked!
But if you don't hand that $5 in to the police then it's also theft.SBOB said:No it wasn't.. It was ddos'd
Massive difference. It's about the equivalent difference of finding $5 on the ground and robbing a bank.
That's the red flag right their. They can't be trusted as in incapable to keep it safe. So its like our data is up for grabs for any real conspirers out there in the world. This country simply isn't savvy enough to do this successfully. That's the general feeling.neal32 said:This is a real issue of our privacy that's being eroded and shouldn't be dismissed. The current government can't be trusted on the most mundane of issues let alone the safe keeping of australians collective data.
I'm doing consulting work for a telco at the moment (won't say which one... But there are only 3 to guess from) and believe me... Your ISP knows everything your browser knows and more. For a start your ISP doesn't have an incognito (also known as **** browsing) mode.Ducatiboy stu said:I would be more worried about what your browser knows more than your ISP
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