A look into Corporate fraud in Australia, Stranglehold of Monopolies, Telecom's Oppression, Biased Law System, Corporate influence in politics, Industrial Relations disadvantaging workers, Outsourcing Australian Jobs, Offshore Banking, Petrochemical company domination, Invisibly Visible. It's not what you see, it's what goes on behind the scenes. Australia, the warrantless colony. Note: Site has more info in desktop mode or 'web version' as seen at bottom of page, when on smartphone.
01 February 2019
Google abused an Apple backdoor to collect user data
In the wake of the Facebook VPN scandal,
it was recently revealed that Google has also been abusing the same
Apple backdoor to collect data from users as young as thirteen. Similar
to the Facebook Research app, Google's Screenwise Meter has
been using Apple's Enterprise Certificate, which is meant for
distributing employee-only apps, to circumvent the App Store and tap
into a wealthy reserve of user data.
Upon
downloading the app, users complete a survey and are then sent a special
code that allows them to download the Enterprise Certificate-based VPN
app that is then used to track all of their app and Internet use. In
order to entice people to go through with it, Screenwise lets users earn gift cards in return for their data. The app was first launched in 2012, though, as TechCrunch points out, it was later rebranded as part of the broader Cross Media Panel and Google Opinion Rewards programs.
Similarly to Facebook's now-defunct Research app, Screenwise Meter was
also initially available to people as young as thirteen, though Google
later changed the age requirement to eighteen or older. However, minors
could still partake in the program in the same household as other
testers that met the age requirement.
If nothing else, Google has at least been a bit more transparent
than Facebook when it came to explaining what it does with its VPN
tracker. Following TechCrunch's investigation, Google has announced that it will be shutting down the Screenwise Meter app for iOS:
"The
Screenwise Meter iOS app should not have operated under Apple’s
developer enterprise program — this was a mistake, and we apologize. We
have disabled this app on iOS devices. This app is completely voluntary
and always has been. We’ve been upfront with users about the way we use
their data in this app, we have no access to encrypted data in apps and
on devices, and users can opt out of the program at any time."
Source: phonearena.com
28 January 2019
Heir to the throne a tax cheat concealing wealth?
It's always good to get inside information, where bonus
points are given when it comes from a source close to the subject or in this
case the 'heir and successor' (as defined in the Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act) to the throne.
So how does one get the source to blab?
Getting one to squeal is a tricky ordeal, where throughout
the ages many methods have been used to extract valuable information, such as the
rack, bamboo under the fingernails trick, sleep deprivation progressing to more
modern methods like Justin Bieber songs in a cell for days on end.
Since the advent of modern medicine, sodium thiopental comes
along to rewire the brain in order to spill the beans, but can one really beat
the medicine of the ancients?
The cat among the pigeons, the source of the leak, was not
given an exotic cocktail of scopolamine, 3-quinuclidinyl
benzilate, flunitrazepam or some other
combination of letters that apparently have some meaning to neuroscientists.
Nope
she was 'just' given some good ol' fashion alcohol (packaged up in a very expensive format) and set loose.
It's
bad enough that ol' prince Charles is a tax dodger, where Camilla let the cat
out of the bag on that one too?
You see, at a palace birthday bash, Camilla sang like a canary with regards to the royal family's hidden off-shore
accounts, when she got sloshed, no doubt concealing ill gotten gains which have not yet surfaced into
the public news media.
How
can you really trust a corrupt monarchy?
As long as the serfs in the colonies are paying their taxes that enslave them, all is good.
Without breaking out into in pictorial meme:
Why
do tax havens exist? Because governments want them to.
Photos of text: New Idea