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Anonymity and Privacy on the
Web: What Users Need to Know
Anonymity and privacy have become big issues when it
comes to using the Web. In this article, MedZilla addresses
some misconceptions about how anonymous people are when
surfing the net and how to take advantage of the Internet’s
benefits without sacrificing privacy. This article offers
simple tips from a privacy expert, including how to
know if a site is secure.
Marysville, WA (PRWEB) December 5, 2003 --
The Internet has given people a world of new options
for managing their lives and lifestyles, but that newfound
freedom brings with it new obstacles. Job-seeking, banking
and shopping activities can all expose Internet users
to anonymity and privacy issues. By using simple steps,
Web users can minimize those concerns and maximize the
convenience and efficiency of the Web.
“The Internet has made life so much easier,”
says Frank Heasley, PhD, president and CEO of MedZilla.com,
a leading Internet recruitment and professional community
that serves biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, healthcare
and science. “With a click of the mouse, a job
candidate can reach hundreds of interested employers
and recruiters; you can shop for items in the comfort
of your home, pay your bills via the Web, make flight
reservations in minutes and communicate effortlessly
with coworkers, family or friends on the other side
of the globe. But the Internet is a powerful tool, and
like any powerful tool it needs to be used with caution.”
Finding a job
Jordana Beebe, communications director of the Privacy
Rights Clearinghouse, a consumer information and advocacy
group based in San Diego, Calif., says there are rules
of thumb when posting resumes online.
She says that prospective employees need to be careful
about the kind of information they post online. “We’re
discovering that there are data miners or direct marketers
who will specifically go through various types of job
postings on the Internet to glean consumers’ telephone
numbers, names, addresses and email addresses,”
Beebe says. “What we are recommending to consumers
is that they decrease the amount of personal information
they post online regarding their whereabouts, names
and phone numbers. In general, if you are going to post
your resume online, use a throwaway type of email address
that you use specifically to post resumes, so when you
do find a job, you will not be deluged by emails from
'spammers.'”
She warns that people shouldn’t think they can
post resumes on the Web without their current employers
finding out. To minimize that possibility, candidates
can take simple precautions, including using their first
initials and last names, rather than their full names.
Job seekers should always check the privacy policy
of resume Web sites, and pay close attention to how
long those sites store resumes. “Before you even
post the resume, check and make sure you can delete
the resume after you’ve gotten the job,”
she says.
Post your resume sparingly, Beebe says, and focus on
the quality of job boards and not the quantity. “Hand
pick a handful of sites that have good privacy policies
and keep a good track record,” she says. “Use
sites that other people in your profession have had
good luck with and post only the sites that will allow
you to mask your contact information.”
Never put your social security number on your resume,
she adds, and omit references on Web-based resumes.
“We’ve learned about the importance of
privacy during our decade as a job board,” says
Michele Groutage, MedZilla’s director of marketing.
“Today, job candidates who sign on with us are
assigned a MedZilla e-mail address. So, anytime a MedZilla
subscriber searches our candidates’ resumes and
sends them notes, the e-mails first go through MedZilla
to ensure that they’re approved users and really
contacting the candidates about jobs.”
MedZilla has recently taken additional steps to protect
the privacy of its job candidates. “Our resumes
are trade secrets,” Groutage explains, “meaning
if anyone is caught taking them and using them for other
purposes, they could go to jail for a federal offense.”.
Heading off cookies
You might think you’re surfing the Web anonymously,
but you’re really not. Unless you use a software
or program that heads off cookies, Web sites that you
visit might be gathering data on you without your knowledge.
Cookies are small pieces of data that let Web sites
know your e-mail address, which incoming page you entered
the Web site from, how often you visit, how many pages
you look at—even where you went after leaving
the Web site. Sometimes cookies are helpful—they
might store a password so that you don’t have
to input it every time you visit a site, or they might
greet you when you enter a page. But, overall, Web users
should try to minimize cookies if they want to stay
anonymous.
“If you are using the Web without having some
type of anonymous surfing software, you are undoubtedly
picking up cookies and you are undoubtedly providing
information to those Web hosts,” Beebe says.
Most software brokers charge to fend off cookies. And
while the Privacy Rights Clearinghouse doesn’t
believe that consumers should pay to remain anonymous
on the Web, the group thinks Web users should be aware
of the option and it offers a list of such services
at www.privacyrights.org.
Making purchases
Anyone who wants to remain totally anonymous on the
Web should not provide any sort of personal information
on online forms, including those used to make purchases
and request information.
If, however, you’re willing to provide the information
in order to benefit from the convenience and efficiency
of the Web, Beebe says you should first read that site’s
privacy policy and find out what the site will do with
your information once it has been collected. Some Web
sites release or sell information to businesses or other
third parties.
Online purchasers should take a few safety precautions
into consideration, Beebe says. First, make sure the
connection over which you are providing that information
is secure. There are two ways of checking for that:
one is to look for the little lock sign in the lower
left hand corner of the screen. If the padlock looks
like it’s locked, then you are on a secure page.
The other place to check is the address line. If there
is an “s” after the “http,”
then the site is secure.
Beebe checks with the Better Business Bureau when considering
doing business with a company that she has not heard
about. You can check the Better Business Bureau online
and see what kind of records companies have with other
consumers by visiting www.bbb.org.
The privacy organization recommends that anyone using
a credit card to make online purchases should have a
separate credit card that they use only for Internet
transactions. “So, if for some reason that credit
card does get into the wrong hands, you can terminate
the credit card with no problem but you can still have
that backup credit card account in case you need access,”
she says. “It also makes it a lot easier when
you’re going through your itemized monthly statement
to make sure that all the purchases on there are actually
yours.”
Beebe says that giving credit card information to a
credible business is not as dangerous as some might
think. In fact, it’s one of the safer ways to
make purchases online. A federal banking law says that
the actual account holder can only be held accountable
for up to $50 of the charges of a stolen credit card.
“That’s actually a really important point
because what this basically says is that if you are
concerned about fraud on the Internet, using a credit
card is one of the safer ways to make transactions.
That’s in distinction of using a debit card from
a bank. If you use a debit card from a bank, you do
not get the same protection as you do with a credit
card—even if it has a Visa or MasterCard symbol
on it,” Beebe says.
Maintaining privacy
Conducting online banking is usually a secure endeavor,
Beebe says. And credible banks are generally “helpful”
when fraud occurs. Still, the organization recommends
that anyone who is uncomfortable with doing their banking
online should continue to use the traditional ways of
check writing and mailing the checks.
Even buying personal products, like medicines, can
be done with reasonable privacy on the Web, she says.
To some degree, the Web is more private than having
a face-to-face transaction.
Chatting
“We actually get complaints from all too many
people about chat rooms,” Beebe says. The simple
and safe rule with chat rooms is: Once you chat, your
information is there for all to see. Don’t write
anything that you wouldn’t mind posting in public.
The bottom line, Beebe says, is if you really want
anonymity or have to communicate with someone about
something really private, use the “good ol’”
phone or have a face-to-face conversation.
About MedZilla.com
Established in mid 1994, MedZilla is the original web
site to serve career and hiring needs for professionals
and employers in biotechnology, pharmaceuticals, medicine,
science and healthcare. MedZilla databases contain about
10,000 open positions, 13,000 resumes from candidates
actively seeking new positions and 50,000 archived resumes.
Medzilla® is a Registered Trademark owned by Medzilla
Inc. Copyright ©2003, MedZilla, Inc. Permission
is granted to reproduce and distribute this text in
its entirety, and if electronically, with a link to
the URL www.medzilla.com. For permission to quote from
or reproduce any portion of this message, please contact
Michele Groutage, Director of Marketing and Development,
MedZilla, Inc. Email: mgroutage@medzilla.com.
Press Inquiries:
Contact: Michele Groutage
Company: MedZilla, Inc.
Title: Director of Marketing & Development
Phone: 360-657-5681
Email: mgroutage@medzilla.com
URL: http://www.medzilla.com
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