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Your Privacy Policy

 

 

 

 

 

Your Very Own Privacy Policy

There are rules to make sure you permanently delete applications, documents, temporary files, Internet history and cookies.

 

If you are shy, or a spy, you might not want to disclose your creative activity to others who share, or have access to, your computer.

 

It is not easy to achieve secrecy. A competent user can work out a great deal about what is going on. Your average PC leaves an awful lot of trails. Anyone can quickly find out which files have been opened and which web pages have been inspected. You can hide or destroy these trails but it’s not worth it. The following suggestions can help you preserve your modesty or cloak your activities in some degree of secrecy.

 

Set up a separate email account.

It is important not just to add another name to an existing domain as this will share the same password. You also have to avoid the temptation to let the computer save your password. If you do, snoopers can find the account and let the computer bypass your security.

But even if you do have a separate account there are likely to be copies of your mail on servers, so avoid confiding too much to your email. The recipient could forward your secrets to the rest of the world with a misplaced, malevolent or mistaken mouse click.

 

Make sure you delete incoming AND sent mail from the hard disk. 

You can set up an email folder on a removable disk and transfer the mail there before deleting.

 

Sending copies

If you are sending a 'carbon copy' of an email, the recipient will be aware that you sent a copy. Many packages have a 'bcc' or 'blind carbon copy'  option which conceals the identity of other recipients. You might have to click on the To box to see the 'bcc' option.

 

Log off and log out

Don't forget to logout of your email account or call up the screen saver even if you leave your computer for just a few minutes. If someone is feeling really mean, they will nip in and change your password so the next time you try to log in you will be locked out - possibly forever.

 

Set passwords

Make sure you set up all the passwords offered. You do not have to use them but they prevent malicious people doing it for you. Think about it: If you have provided a password, their dastardly plan will be foiled because they need the original password before they can change it. Almost every system allows you to switch the password protection off but you must provide a password.

 

Buy a computer that only you are allowed to use! 

Word processing does not require a powerful new computer. A second hand one should work well. The small print with your software might read like a pact with the devil. But If you read the software licence you will find that you can run it on another machine if it is portable.

 

Install some file encryption to stop people reading your work from disk. 

The best software will not even let you copy a protected file to removable disks. There is some excellent free and shareware, but only use this if you are serious about secrecy because it does rather take over your computer.

 

Encryption should stop people reading what you have written, but once you attach it in plain text to an email, your so-called friends and fiendish family can spy on your bile or creativity. So be careful once you start to move it about.

 

Erect a Fire-Wall. These are useful if you are permanently linked to the web. It monitors incoming traffic and can block people trying to use your computer over the Internet. Try Zone Alarm or Sygate both currently free for personal use.

 

Do not keep a list of your passwords in a nearby draw or on a handy post-it. 

Think up a good password and use it, or a minor variant, for all your systems. A good password is one that is easy to type. If you have to peck at the keys, a snooper can spot your code remarkably easily. Try using adjacent keys so your hands do not have to move and don't forget you can use numbers.

 

You could go to an Internet café and send your work from there if they let you use your own disks. Unfortunately not all allow this type of access.

 

Finally you could leave home and take your computer with you.

But before you take any drastic action, remember that as a writer you want people to read your work, so get used to the prying eyes and take it as a compliment. Get used to teasing and criticism. 'Come out' and tell the family that you are writing. Remember that the plan is to get published and let thousands read your work.

Even when you turn it off and walk away from the computer, you still leave traces of what you have been doing....

Deleting confidential documents
If several people use your computer or you sell it remove sensitive data. Deleting a file and emptying the Recycle Bin does not make it disappeared. All that goes is the pointer to the file telling the system that it can re-use the disk space. Erased documents can often be recovered. Even reformatting once does not guarantee it is clear at formatting just puts in the sector markers. Only specialized software to permanently delete sensitive files by repeated rewriting random information over the old file.

 

Erasing temporary files Some applications such as MS Word create a temporary copy of the file in use. In some cases, these files can be accessed after the original document has been deleted. If your computer ever crashed you will find Windows will try and recover files so they are worth looking for if you have a disaster. Look for files with ~ in their title.

 

Web history Windows remember which Web sites you have visited. This can be useful if you want to spy on the sites your children have visited but if you are planning a surprise holiday for your partner they will be able to follow most of the transaction if they are that way inclined. You can use the Windows "Disk Cleanup" utility to delete these files. You should also delete the contents of the directory C:\windows\temp\ if you want to 'cover your track'.

 

Cookies
Cookies are stored in the directory C:\Windows\Cookies. You can erase the contents of this folder but some cookies help you when you log onto some sites.

 

Swap files

These keep a random collection of files you had been using on the hard disk. Useful if you want to recover from a crash but the downside that the information is there if you know where to look.

 

Some more Web Do's and Don'ts

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