The Email Privacy Act forces the government to seek warrants before asking tech companies for emails. Should this be the same for an individual’s personal emails?
If you want to avoid inbox clutter and spam from coming to your email, it’s a good idea to use a digest service like Throttle to keep your inbox clean.
Privacy policies are often lengthy and hard to understand, so the Usable Privacy Project created a tool that makes privacy policies easier to understand. Check it out.
Google seems to know everything, including where your home is located. This info is based on your router, but how does Google know where your WiFi router is anyway and can you stop this?
Tagmmer is a web-based alternative to such services as Dropbox and Puu.sh. It’s also a powerful sharing application in its own right. Let’s check it out.
A startup called Privacy has created a solution that uses a one-time-use debit card number for online transactions. Will this make online payment safer? Let’s check it out.
If you want to block someone on Instagram but still want to keep your account public, here is how you can block anyone without changing the privacy settings.
GoogleTel is freeware software that automatically arranges downloaded Google contacts in .html format so you can easily print them. Here’s how to use it.
As a Gmail user, you get the benefit of regularly newly-added features. Here are two new Gmail security features that have been added to its growing list of useful features.