…the way the Dutch do.
(but they still lock them, just in case.)
Reflections and observations on the expatriate experience from an American scientist living and working in the Netherlands.
by Dave Hampton
by Dave Hampton
An article in the New York Times today revealed that Adobe Flash maintains separate storage for Flash, creating a rabbit hole for third party trackers to hide.
The cache holds Flash browsing cookies and third-party applications, separate from the public cache used by IE and Firefox. Clearing the browser cache and cookies from your computer doesn’t touch the Adobe area, creating a big privacy hole. Third party vendors have been using this as a back-door way to re-insert their tracking cookies and applications.
Tech sites advise that simply finding and deleting the storage contents also disables Flash. Adobe says this is normal: the area was intended to store user settings and not for third party use (although they don’t prohibit it). I did some reading at Macromedia, and it’s unsettling: Flash also determines whether third-parties can activate your camera and microphone without permission
Yike: that’s a case where I’ve been telling folks that they are being too paranoid. Who would want to (or could) access your laptop camera without your knowledge? Now it turns out that people could.
It’s always discouraging to see what the companies are doing behind the scenes to get information about you and access to your computer that they can sell to others. Free-market libertarians should take note of the abuses.
Unfortunately, it’s not practical to avoid these applications entirely: the best you can do is lock them down so that they don’t do more mischief.
Adobe has a description of the issue here , and a Global Settings Manager that can be used to adjust privacy and security for your computer. The options include denying use of your camera and microphone to applications, clearing third party cookies, and preventing storage of third-party applications.
It’s worth taking a couple of minutes to close this privacy hole if you are a Flash user.
by Dave Hampton
Okay, it’s got Lardy Cakes and Perry Drinks instead of fried beer and cider, but there’s still lots that’s familiar in the fall festival now sprawled across Parker’s Piece in Cambridge.
When the kids were growing up, we’d attend the big Puyallup or Evergreen State Fairs each fall. The animal barns were always their favorites,
lines of immaculately groomed cows, pigs, chickens, and rabbits. The UK equivalent has smaller cages with bunnies and hens, but still fascinating to the toddlers.
The local 4H clubs would judge of everything from canned goods to baked items, flower arrangements to photographs. A smaller array, just as earnestly judged, fills a nearby tent. The judges taste, poke, and issue certificates: as in the US, everyone is a winner.
There are vendors selling all sorts of handicrafts and foods, the decorations have more flair here and the bottles and jars come from more exotic locations. However, it doesn’t make up for the loss of the guys with the kitchen knives, carving vegetables and creating salads to the rhythm of his own voice.
And, of course, rides for the kids. I really like this new variant.
…and Cambridge being Cambridge, there have to be some geek-friendly spaces as well.
