GillyBee wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 10:13 am
And as far as privacy goes, I tend to assume that if you are online, you have just shared with the world to some degree.
This week's Sunburst hack shows that it does not matter how paranoid you are, you can still lose data as the US military have just learned.
It is why it look me so many years to join up here and start posting!
There is a difference between information voluntarily parted with, and that of which is logged of a users general actions. I accept some form of monitoring e.g. the number of posts I have made on this forum. But not the paragraphs of which I have highlighted, and the time it takes me to turn a page.
GillyBee wrote: ↑Sun Dec 20, 2020 10:13 am
And as far as privacy goes, I tend to assume that if you are online, you have just shared with the world to some degree.
This week's Sunburst hack shows that it does not matter how paranoid you are, you can still lose data as the US military have just learned.
It is why it look me so many years to join up here and start posting!
The tablet has no card in it for calling etc, and I'm pretty sure I could disable it. Spends the vast majority of its time offline. I do have back ups, but that's going to involve several kindles, because a lot of the books I have are of the useful variety.
You can pick up a used Kindle cheap on ebay, the batteries even when old last a lot longer than any phone will. 4GB Kindle will store well over 2000 books, they can be recharged from a powerbank, they are worth the money for sure. Two bug out bags at home, both have a Kindle packed.
Privacy? Better than a phone and you can turn wifi off.
Richard
South Wales UK
Retired, spending the children's inheritance.
While there are many more opportunities to exploit and entire OS, the Kindle software is explicitly designed with data trawling in mind.
Were there a way to manually hack and disconnect one from Amazons network, reliably and without Amazon fighting back by resetting changes when synchronising, then that would be the solution. But that is not how Amazon designed their Kindle.
I’d feel more secure with a dead tree in my hands, but overall iOS has made a lot of effort to widen that gap over its competitors.
Everything else stands, the battery life and convenience, but not at the hands of my privacy... perhaps I could create a faux Amazon account ?