
The basic idea is not that unreasonable at all. A lot of issues, ranging from pretty mundane (you're a bit dehydrated right now) to the potentially life-saving (we've detected something that indicates potential cancer or disease much earlier than you would ever have known had you waited for symptoms to appear, at which point it's too late), can be diagnosed via monitoring of urine and feces. It would seem like a technology like this might be very useful in clinical settings -- physician's offices, hospitals, and care facilities -- but of extremely limited value at the retail level. People with specific health issues and concerns might benefit from having something like this at home, but the overwhelming majority of people wouldn't. Worse, it could lend itself to fostering a false sense of security and result in people not seeing their physicians regularly, or perhaps even when they have symptoms that something it wrong, because their toilet is telling them everything is just fine.Geezzzz ... who on earth might have thought that installing a camera in a toilet was a good idea ... at all?
Where did you see that?Geezzzz ... who on earth might have thought that installing a camera in a toilet was a good idea ... at all?
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/two-virginia-men-arrested-conspiring-destroy-government-databasesTwin brothers Muneeb and Sohaib Akhter, both 34, were also sentenced to several years in prison in June 2015, after pleading guilty to accessing U.S. State Department systems without authorization and stealing personal information belonging to dozens of co-workers and a federal law enforcement agent who was investigating their crimes.
Muneeb Akhter also hacked a private data aggregation company in November 2013 and the website of a cosmetics company in March 2014.
After serving their sentences, they were rehired as government contractors and were indicted again last month on charges of computer fraud, destruction of records, aggravated identity theft, and theft of government information.
Hackers are hacking?The indictment alleges that on or about Feb. 18, Muneeb Akhter deleted approximately 96 databases storing U.S. government information. Many of these databases contained records and documents related to Freedom of Information Act matters administered by federal government departments and agencies, as well as sensitive investigative files of federal government components.
Court documents further allege that approximately one minute after deleting a DHS database, Muneeb Akhter asked an artificial intelligence tool how to clear system logs following the deletion of databases.
According to the indictment, the brothers also discussed cleaning out their house in anticipation of a law enforcement search. The company laptops used by both men were wiped before being returned to the federal contractor.

What if the "deep state" is nothing more than a consequence of hiring the wrong people?https://www.bleepingcomputer.com/ne...-records-accused-of-wiping-96-govt-databases/
Contractors with hacking records accused of wiping 96 govt databases
https://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/two-virginia-men-arrested-conspiring-destroy-government-databases
Hackers are hacking?
View attachment 360047
This was a bad contractor looking for cheap workers for a contract.What if the "deep state" is nothing more than a consequence of hiring the wrong people?
While encryption may keep message content private, it does not protect the context: who sent the message, when, from where, how often, and to whom. These invisible threads—metadata and identity traces—are often enough to expose, endanger, or incriminate.

This is known as signals analysis, which is a part of the broader field of SIGINT (signals intelligence). It has been around for centuries, if not millennia. Just knowing who is talking to who leaks valuable information. Once radio communications became common and message encryption became the norm for sensitive information, it was quickly realized that just the volume of traffic often conveyed actionable intelligence, which is why radio operators were commonly tasked with sending a roughly constant volume of encrypted traffic every day spread throughout the day, even if it was random gibberish. But this also fosters boredom and sloppiness among young radio operators working in very stressful and uncomfortable situations, which is likely what led to a major break in Enigma and the removal of the Spanish navy from the chess board as an effective player.Edit: I just noticed that the article is really an informertial ... but it's interesting nevertheless
It's harder to tell now what is junk advertising and what is real information. Advertisers will sometimes use real articles to post their junk sales.Edit: I just noticed that the article is really an informertial ... but it's interesting nevertheless
It's harder to tell now what is junk advertising and what is real information. Advertisers will sometimes use real articles to post their junk sales.
Hi,In August 1999, Hotmail experienced one of the most widespread web security breaches of its time. A flaw in its login script allowed anyone to log into any account by entering “eh” as the password. The exploit, publicized by a hacker group called Hackers Unite, exposed millions of accounts in mere minutes. Microsoft quickly patched the issue and denied it was a deliberate backdoor. This incident remains a cautionary tale in cybersecurity history.
| Thread starter | Similar threads | Forum | Replies | Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
Privacy and security tips for windows android and ios | Off-Topic | 0 | |
| B | Kindle privacy issue. | Off-Topic | 16 | |
|
|
Indeed and California's latest privacy law | Jobs & Career Advising | 0 | |
| S | Is this a wi-fi system? | General Electronics Chat | 5 | |
|
|
Internet Privacy Repeal, For or Against? | Off-Topic | 35 |