Outfoxing the cybercrooks
Finally, finally, after five decades of waiting the question has been answered! I will come back to that in due course but first some discussion of other more current questions.
Finally, finally, after five decades of waiting the question has been answered! I will come back to that in due course but first some discussion of other more current questions.
There are times an Information Technology support person such as me has the opportunity to see both sides of a disagreement, and sometimes I have to sympathize with both sides and lament that there is no way the needs of both parties can ever be satisfactorily reconciled. As a professional who has spent years doing computer support work for law offices and financial institutions, I fully understand the need for security, confidentiality, and strict adherence to procedures. As someone who also works with an older population of computer users I also understand the desirability of avoiding unnecessarily complicated procedures whenever possible.
Every year at this time I sit down to pen a piece looking back at the top technical news of the year just past.
Last week I began relating my experience using a program “uBlock Origin” (not to be confused with the similarly-named “uBlock”), the function of which is to block advertising from appearing on web sites.
There is a war going on! It is a titanic struggle between advertisers who want to put their message in front of as many people as they can, and consumers who do not want to be bothered. Advertisers have resorted to in-your-face ads that cover the whole screen and are often difficult or impossible to close. Computer users have then resorted to using software to block ads.
As this column goes to press the sordid quadrennial political circus north of the border is thankfully coming to a close.
Way back in the 1960s when I started helping out around my dad’s camera shop I quickly learned what it was like to deal with people who had been ripped off elsewhere.