24 December 2022

Consumer Warning: Eufy surveillance products not safe for your privacy!


Have Australian ‘consumers’ been warned by the authorities of Anker’s sub brand Eufy's false advertising and security risk?

Basically Anker should be in the courts for false advertising which has been exposed on various tech channels approx. two weeks ago.

The products (deliberately) do not feature encryption as stated, which makes them easily hackable with a simple and common video player such as VLC.

What's worse is that advertising states that no data is sent to the cloud, but upon further inspection, your biometric data, i.e. facial features are given an id number and stored on the company's servers.

See details within:


Therefore this product cannot be recommended for purchase or use, where the recommendation would be for the ‘consumer’ to return the product to the store for a full refund.

Australian retailers such as JB Hi-Fi, Bunnings, The Good Guys, SuperCheap Auto sell this product.

As of the time of this post the Australian Cyber Security Centre has not posted any information about Eufy, where around that time it only posted about Citrix Gateway vulnerabilities.

A failure of the Australian Government, putting consumers at risk.

Meta agrees to pay $725mn to settle Cambridge Analytica case

Proposed figure would be largest settlement achieved in a US data privacy class action and biggest paid by Facebook parent.

Meta said in a statement: ‘We pursued a settlement as it is in the best interest of our community and shareholders’ 

Meta has agreed to pay $725mn to settle a class-action lawsuit that claimed that the social media giant, which owns Facebook, Instagram and WhatsApp, allowed third parties to access users’ personal information.

The proposed amount would be the largest settlement achieved in a US data privacy class action, and the most Meta has ever paid out in a lawsuit, revealed in a court filing released on Thursday.

The long-running case was prompted by the Cambridge Analytica scandal in 2018, where a company whistleblower revealed that Facebook allowed the British political consulting firm to access the personal data of up to 87mn users. However, the class action lawsuit expanded the remit to include other third parties that may have inappropriately used Facebook data.

Meta’s settlement, which does not admit any wrongdoing, comes with the company hit by the slowest growth in revenues since going public amid fierce competition from social media rivals and a slump in digital advertising.

Last month, the social network led by chief executive Mark Zuckerberg cut 11,000 staff, about 13 per cent of its workforce, as part of cost-saving measures and recently reduced office space in the UK and US.

The class action lawsuit claimed that the company had allowed app developers and business partners to access users’ data without their consent. The estimated number of people affected in the case is between 250mn and 280mn people, representing all US Facebook users between 2007 and 2022, the filing said.

Meta said it had revamped its approach to privacy over the past three years. “We pursued a settlement as it is in the best interest of our community and shareholders,” it added in a statement.

Digital rights campaigners and whistleblowers previously accused Cambridge Analytica of using harvested personal data to influence the results of the UK’s EU referendum and the 2016 US presidential election and breaking campaign rules.

Meta paid a £500,000 fine to the UK’s data watchdog over Cambridge Analytica, which found no evidence that it misused data in an attempt to influence the Brexit referendum or help any Russian intervention in political processes but that it had failed to protect the personal information of its users.

The tech giant has also paid $5bn to resolve a US Federal Trade Commission probe into Meta privacy practices and $100mn to settle a US Securities and Exchange Commission investigation over claims it misled investors about the misuse of user data.

Multiple investigations by US state attorneys-general are ongoing.


Source:ft.com

20 December 2022

Royal Assent to Legislation

Royal Assent to Bills:

The Constitution requires legislation to receive "royal assent", by the Governor-General as the Sovereign's representative, or by the Sovereign directly.

See further details within email:


See Section 58 from the 'Commonwealth of Australia Constitution Act':


Please also note that in Victoria, a body called 'SARC' (Scrutiny of Acts and Regilations Committee) checks to see that the bills brought forward comply with a law called the Charter of Human Rights and Responsibilities Act 2006.

The Committee also scrutinises regulations and legislative instruments pursuant to sections 21 and 25A of the Subordinate Legislation Act 1994.  

All new law brought into Victoria from 2020 with regards to a particular health event must have passed through SARC and given the green light with regards to Human Rights, where it must be signed off.

Victorian Premier Daniel Andrews, Human Rights abuser:

From 2020 Victorian premier Daniel Michael Andrews began a human rights abuse campaign.


He even stated that people's views about human rights has "no basis on science, fact or law"

So, how does the Victoiran Equal Opportunity and Human Rights Commission fell about that?

Don't tell SARC about that either.

https://new.parliament.vic.gov.au/get-involved/committees/scrutiny-of-acts-and-regulations-committee/

And the law was thrown under a bus too?

https://www.legislation.vic.gov.au/in-force/acts/charter-human-rights-and-responsibilities-act-2006/015




Indiana sues TikTok citing safety and security concerns

Indiana sues TikTok, claiming it exposes children to harmful content.

Indiana’s attorney general sued TikTok on Wednesday, claiming the Chinese-owned company exposes minors to inappropriate content and makes user data accessible to China, in one of the strongest moves against the social media giant taken by a state.

Indiana’s lawsuit is the latest move to put TikTok and its parent company under scrutiny. As U.S. officials have sought to regulate TikTok, the platform in recent years has come under sharp questioning in Washington and been under investigation by a bipartisan group of attorneys general for its potential effects on youth mental health, its data security and its ties to China.

Filing two lawsuits in a state superior court, Indiana Attorney General Todd Rokita (R) argued that everything including people’s interests and their facial features are potentially accessible to the Chinese government. The suits claim that TikTok and its Beijing-based owner, tech giant ByteDance, have deceived consumers about their data security and suitability for young teens.

One suit alleges that China could use the vast amount of American consumer information tracked and collected by TikTok in the name of its own national security or “to spy on, blackmail, and coerce” users. The suit echoed long-standing U.S. government concerns that China could access American user data through ByteDance.

As Washington wavers on TikTok, Beijing exerts control

TikTok and ByteDance have also misled consumers about how safe the app is for children, Rokita’s office claims in the second lawsuit. The state’s court filings dispute the app’s 12-plus age rating and “infrequent/mild” designation for content about sex, drugs, alcohol and violence in Apple’s App Store.

Not only are entire corners of TikTok dedicated to trends and songs that involve sexual content, the suit argues, but the app’s autocomplete search feature and video-suggestion algorithm mean explicit clips are often recommended to users who may not even search for them. Sexually explicit content is banned by TikTok, but users often change one letter in a word to get around those rules.

“At the very least, the company owes consumers the truth about the age-appropriateness of its content and the insecurity of the data it collects on users. We hope these lawsuits force TikTok to come clean and change its ways,” Rotika said in a statement.

Home to millions of users, viral clips and a culture-shifting algorithm, the platform has captured two-thirds of American teens, a quarter of whom say they’re on the video-sharing app “almost constantly,” a Pew Research study found in August. The app’s unique “For You” algorithm learns a user’s tastes and then feeds video after video, sometimes with an accuracy that stuns users.

Why lawmakers are not buying assurances from TikTok on China

As the app has become a cultural phenomenon, U.S. policymakers have raised concerns about privacy and data, children’s online safety and national security. TikTok executives have said the app does not share information with the Chinese government and have attempted to quell fears from members of Congress about national security and transparency.

The company has said the data it collects is not stored in China and is not subject to Chinese law, claims disputed by Indiana in the lawsuit.

TikTok spokesperson Brooke Oberwetter said in an emailed statement to The Washington Post on Wednesday that “youth well-being” was part of TikTok’s policies, including age-limited features and tools for parents to control what children view.

“While we don’t comment on pending litigation, the safety, privacy and security of our community is our top priority,” Oberwetter said. “We are also confident that we’re on a path in our negotiations with the U.S. Government to fully satisfy all reasonable U.S. national security concerns, and we have already made significant strides toward implementing those solutions.”

The suits came amid steps by other states to limit TikTok’s access to their data. Also on Wednesday, Texas Gov. Greg Abbott (R) ordered state agencies to ban their employees from using the app on any government-issued devices. That followed similar directives last week in South Dakota and Maryland.

A TikTok spokesperson told The Post this week that state officials’ concerns “are largely fueled by misinformation about our company.”

The growing pushback against TikTok has included competition from fellow social media behemoths. Meta, which owns TikTok rivals Facebook and Instagram, hired a major Republican consulting firm to conduct a campaign to turn public opinion against TikTok, partly in a bid to distract from scrutiny of Meta, The Post found in March.

Facebook paid GOP firm to malign TikTok

Indiana’s lawsuit argues that TikTok “routinely exposes” consumers’ data “to access and exploitation by the Chinese Government and Communist Party,” partly through ByteDance’s ownership of the app, and misleads users about how safe their data is. Rokita’s office argues that TikTok’s assurances that data is not being sent to China are false, saying the data the app collects can be accessed by people and companies subject to Chinese law, including ByteDance.

“While TikTok vacuums up reams of this highly sensitive and personal information about Indiana consumers, it deceives and misleads them about the risks the app routinely poses to their data,” the state’s complaint says, later concluding: “TikTok is a wolf in sheep’s clothing.”

At the same time, TikTok, which requires users to enter an age of 13 or older to create an account, has short videos on everything including hallucinogenic mushrooms and bondage. The lawsuit cites lyrics of various popular songs, such as Cardi B’s hit “WAP” and dance moves including twerking as evidence that the platform contains content inappropriate for young teens.

Just typing the first two letters of certain TikTok trends will bring up search prompts for explicit content, the suit notes, often offering videos categorized under tags that are misspelled to avoid triggering the app’s content bans. Further, a mode in the app meant to restrict younger users from seeing vulgar videos is ineffective, still serving sexual content in response to searches, the Indiana attorney general’s office argues.

“TikTok intentionally falsely reports the frequency of sexual content, nudity, and mature/suggestive themes on the TikTok platform to the App Store because TikTok wants to keep and increase young users’ engagement with the TikTok platform,” the complaint says.

The lawsuit also raises concerns about how the platform polices videos related to child pornography, rape fantasies and abuse. Citing a Forbes investigation, the state alleges that users get around TikTok’s policy banning sexual or exploitative content by uploading content showing child sex abuse to private accounts and then distributing the log-in information so others can log in and view it.

On its website, TikTok says it is “deeply committed to ensuring the safety of minors” and prohibits any videos relating to child sexual exploitation or endangerment. Such videos are “subject to intervention from law enforcement,” the company says.

Drew Harwell contributed to this report.

Source: washingtonpost.com

19 December 2022

Windows 11 v 10 resource use

As time goes on Microsoft continues to data mine your computer use via its spyware tool marketed as an operating system called Windows.

Telemetry, phone home, backdoors, keylogging, etc have become more prevalent as the numbers rise in the version of Windows.

Here is a comparison of a version of Windows 11 that user’s computers comes preinstalled with that you must pay for, even if you do not want this product.

After a few minutes of ‘settling down’ the user’s/person’s personal computer uses 3.3 GB of RAM, 127 Processes, 1294 Threads and 44381 Handles


Noting also that the CPU (Central Processing Unit) idles at 1.53Ghz.

Windows 10 from 2019, shows a much leaner picture.


Processes are at 89, Threads at 719 and Handles at 27017, while only using 1.3GB of RAM.

Also the processor is working less harder at 1.02Ghz.

What sort of sloppy programming or how much spyware is in the extra 2GB of RAM?

Microsoft's archaic programming practice is based on a 50 year old language C, and its newer C++, where it even acknowledges that 70% of vulnerabilities stem from this.

If you’re serious about privacy and a more efficient operating system with no bloatware then Linux should be considered.

It’s so good that even Microsoft uses it instead of its own proprietary, closed source server operating system.

We do not recommend the use of Microsoft products, where even it’s Office Suite is irrelevant in today’s computing world.

Keeping in mind that Windows 8.1 used:


33 Processes, 460 Threads and 10630 Handles, while only using 1GB RAM.