Tpiah2's Posts
Nairaland Forum › Tpiah2's Profile › Tpiah2's Posts
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 (of 57 pages)
awoluyi:hm! you watched avatar. |
1. What a friend we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear! What a privilege to carry everything to God in prayer! O what peace we often forfeit, O what needless pain we bear, all because we do not carry everything to God in prayer. 2. Have we trials and temptations? Is there trouble anywhere? We should never be discouraged; take it to the Lord in prayer. Can we find a friend so faithful who will all our sorrows share? Jesus knows our every weakness; take it to the Lord in prayer. 3. Are we weak and heavy laden, cumbered with a load of care? Precious Savior, still our refuge; take it to the Lord in prayer. Do thy friends despise, forsake thee? Take it to the Lord in prayer! In his arms he'll take and shield thee; thou wilt find a solace there. |
. |
A new study found that 91% of health-related web pages reveal potentially sensitive information to third parties like data brokers and online advertisers. A new study has found that health-related web pages often leak information about you and the information you access to third parties, raising concerns about online privacy. To conduct the study, University of Pennsylvania PhD student Timothy Libert analyzed the top 50 search results for 1,986 common diseases, some 80,000 web pages. He found that on 91% of the pages, third parties like social networks, advertisers, and data brokers could access information about who was viewing the page, like the user’s IP address. On 70% of the pages, those third parties could see information about specific “conditions, treatments and diseases” viewed. Altogether, 78% of the health-related web pages sent information about you to Google, 31% sent information to Facebook, and 5% sent information to Experian, a credit bureau and data broker. What’s the big deal? Libert has two major concerns about these practices. The first is that the third parties could match you with your medical search results, a problem he calls “personal identification.” This isn’t a totally imaginary scenario—data brokers routinely collect information about you from your online activity, shopping habits, and public records, then turn around and sell that information to advertisers. That already includes sensitive medical information: One data broker was caught hawking lists of “rape sufferers,” “domestic abuse victims” and “HIV/AIDS patients.” Second, advertisers could discriminate against you based on your medical searches, regardless of whether your search results are ever connected to you personally. That’s called “blind discrimination.” In other words, advertisers could serve you certain ads and offer you certain promotions based on the websites you read. Again, this practice can be innocuous, but it can also have a dark side. “It’s like any other form of discrimination,” Libert says. “If you’re going to extend a favorable offer to somebody, your best client probably isn’t somebody with terminal cancer.” The tech-savvy might think their searches are private because they delete cookies or use a private browser, like Google Chrome’s “incognito mode.” Sorry, but no. That’s because of the way websites work. Libert explains that a web page is like a recipe. The code says, “display an image from this file” or “play this video from Youtube.” To pull in content from another website’s server—like a video from Youtube—your server makes a “request” to that third-party server, and reveals information about you in the process. For example, the third party can see the name of the webpage you’re visiting, which may sound harmless, but can reveal a lot. You might not, for example, want advertisers and data brokers to know that you recently read “www.cdc.gov/hiv”. “Even if you’re using incognito mode or something, the HTTP requests, at the very basic level, are still being made,” Libert says. And you usually don’t even know it’s happening. While you can see evidence of some third-party requests, like Youtube videos and Facebook “like” buttons, Libert says most requests are bits of code invisible to the non-programmer’s eye. http://time.com/money/3721200/health-privacy-online/ |
agree or disagree? for those who have never been married but might (or might not) have a baby mama or two. Tuface exited the club few years back. |
. |
. |
jonaifame22:your post makes no sense. how does it concern you btw, who is pinging on their phone? Or is this another phone measuring contest crap. abeg, this gossip rumour mongering don tire me, continue, will catch up with yall later. |
still trying to find out why there's so much rejoicing whenever somebody says she hooked one! |
raayah:aunty, you are changing the subject. you said you have no control over who chases you, hence your dalliances with your married boyfriend who has five children. indeed you do have control over who you fancy, because i'm quite sure if your married boyfriend father of five told you he was broke and needs money to feed his wife and five children, o ma ba ese e soro kiakia ni. you go pick race. |
donholy28:is that so. |
The thread is not for every tom, dick and harry, its not one size fits all. |
Bashers, come o. |
The self hate goes beyond what you outlined there! Being from the same tribe or village as someone doesnt mean they will not hate you! like I said, should we blame whites and foreigners for this? |
Hope Obama, Buhari, the Nigerian senate, interested foreigners and casual observers and your detractors are not reading this! |
raayah:Have you ever heard of personal blogs or diary section? please stop giving d.umb responses on threads. your issues are clearer now. No wonder a married father of five is your only suitor. Sorry, is that my fault? I can take the blame o! |
another Igala candidate should be fielded. |
interloper:and? ![]() |
a report said he'd been sick for at least the past 7 days. so, stop dramatizing things. besides, from the suspicious pictures and postings on nairaland, obviously some of you are fully aware what was going on. |
Shymm3x:shut it, thanks. |
Shymm3x:give it a rest plz. You claim to be Ijebu- people from Lagos and it's environs have been travelling overseas for studies for over 300 years. so just stop trying to "buzzword" Ondo when we all know you are only out gathering info for your paymasters. |
it depends on the speed at which you are travelling. a shooting star looks that way because it's moving at very high speeds through the atmosphere and appears as a bright light. just to give an example. so, if the speed is perhaps faster than light, it's possible you'd be transported to another realm. |
fmc1:hello fake poster, always check google before posting s.tupidity on a public forum. |
ok. |
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 ... 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 (of 57 pages)
I guess there trying to get used to QWERTY key pads, hence the constant typing.

