Internet Security ABC

 

Internet RemailerThree Benefits to Using an Internet Remailer

Why would a person want to use an Internet remailer service, and for that matter, exactly what is an Internet remailer? Let's take the second question first. A remailer is anonymous, and is also called an anonymous server. An Internet remailer is free. The Internet remailer allows a person to send email to a person without that person knowing the name or email address that it came from. Internet remailers are generally free services, usually designed by people for their own personal use who then allow others to use them as well. The reason for them being free is rather simple: the people using them are concerned with privacy and are not likely to give out a credit or debit card number.

Why would you use an Internet remailer? Let's say you live in a community that has political controversy. You want to express your political views to others inside and outside of the
community but wish to be anonymous to avoid retaliation. This could for example be a political controversy. By using an Internet remailer you are able to stay anonymous and still get your views across.

Now, let's say that you are looking for a new job. There are dozens of job boards out there to post your resume on, but you know that the HR people at your current company scan the job boards themselves, and if they find out you are looking for another job, then you are in danger of loosing the job you have prematurely. Using an Internet remailer allows you to target the companies you'd like to apply to secretly. You won't have to worry about the boss finding out what you are doing.

Another use of Internet remailng services is to protect a whistle blower. If you work for the government for instance, and you discover something illegal going on and want to expose it, but want to do so in a manner that will keep you safe from retaliation an Internet remailer is useful. Imagine if, during the Watergate years, the Internet had existed. Rather than calling Woodward and Bernstein at the Washington Post and arranging dangerous meetings in parking garages, Deep Throat would simply have used an Internet remailer to send Woodward and Bernstein the information they needed.

How does an Internet remailer work? For a good example, look at the Internet remailer that was operated by Johan Helsingius. Helsingius is President of a Helsinki, Finland Company. When his service was in operation you could write to someone through his company and his computer would strip away your address and your name, replacing it with a dummy address and it would then forward the message to the recipient. His computer would also forward you your new anonymous address. Helsingius recently ceased operation of his remailer due to harassment from groups who disapproved, and because as he said there were many other services doing the same thing, so his was no longer as necessary as he felt it once was. There are more than a dozen public Internet remailers active right now, and the numbers change daily as they tend to come and go. This comes from the fact that they require time and money to maintain and produce no income.

Helsingius was interviewed in Wired Magazine recently and in the article he compared Internet remailers to telephones with caller ID and anonymous calling features. When caller ID first came out, many people were upset that their ID would be known. They were used to the phone being an anonymous device. That quickly led to an anonymous calling feature. Since the beginning of the telephone people were used to anonymity, and expected the same thing in email. Helsingius also stated that he was inspired in creating his Internet remailer by the oppression he had witnessed in the former Soviet Union. As a native of Finland he grew up next door to the Soviet Union and saw how they controlled ways of spreading information. For instance, in the Soviet Union if you owned a photocopier or a typewriter, samples of the product produced by the typewriter or copier had to be supplied to the government. Then they could trace information to you that came off of your machine. This control of the information flow is contrary to western thought and the ideal of freedom of speech and expression that is best exemplified in the First Amendment to the U.S. Constitution, part of the American Bill of Rights. Helsingius believed that in creating a way to send email anonymously he was doing his part for freedom of speech.

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Internet Security
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Channel the Cookie Monster in You - Computer Cookies Can Be Bad For Your Computer's Health
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Computer Deep Freeze - Ten Tips to Keep your PC Up and Running
Computer Junkyard - Does Spam Filtering Really Help?
Dial-Up vs. Broadband - Which is the Safer Alternative?
Doesn't Ad up - Three Things that Adware does to your Computer
Don't Click No! How to Safely Close those Pop-up Windows
Don't Get Hacked Off-How to Stop Computer Interlopers in their Tracks
Exercise Parental Control - Five Tips to Keep Kids Safe on the Internet
Exterminate those Bugs on your PC
Getting Down With Downloads - How to Protect Your Computer
Hijacked at Home - Five Steps to Protect Your Home PC
Identity Theft via Internet Security Flaws
Inoculate Yourself against Computer Viruses
Internet Anonymizers - Why and When You Should Use Them
Key Logging Capers Part Two - Three Reasons why it is a Problem
Key Logging Capers - Three Reasons Why You Need It
Let's Go Phishing! - Five Ways to Avoid Being Hooked by This Scam
Maintaining Your Privacy on the Internet - Five Things you can do
Malicious Instant Messages-Three Ways Instant Messaging Compromises Internet Security
Malware is bad for your Computer
Picking Blackberries - Why Mobile Technology Needs More Security
Pound Those Pop-Ups
Six Tips for Staying Healthy in a Computer Virus World
Something Doesn't Register - Cleaning your Computer's Registry for Safety
Spies Everywhere - What is Spyware and Why is it so Bad?
Squash those Worms - Four Ways to Keep your PC Critter-Free
That Wasn't Scripted! Why Scripted Viruses are Bad News
The Basics of Internet Website Encryption
The Cookie Monster - How Do Cookies Influence Internet Security?
The Digital Certificate - What's It Mean and Why is It Important?
Three Benefits to Using an Internet Remailer
Three Reasons to Wipe Your Computer's Internet History Files Clean
Three Ways that an Internet Firewall Can Be Compromised
Three Ways to Identify a Virus Hoax
Three Ways to make sure your Online Credit Card Transaction is Safe
Toolbar Traps - What You Should Know BEFORE Downloading that "Helpful" Toolbar
Top Five Reasons to Install a Firewall
Top Five Spyware Threats to Internet Security
Top Five Vulnerable Areas in Internet Security
Top Five Worst Viruses and How to Protect Your Computer against Them
Top Four Ways to Ensure a Secure Password
Top Ten Tools to Boost your Internet Security
What IP Addresses Mean in the Scheme of Internet Security
When Formatting the Hard Drive is Your Only Recourse
Internet Privacy
Remote Access Trojans Hijacking your Computer
Precautions You Should Take When Installing WiFi in your Home
Sold! How to Maintain your Privacy and Still Indulge in Online Auctions
Social Networking Be Careful of What You Post!
Sneaky Ways to Get Around those Internet Privacy Issues
Identity Theft
Electronic Mail Identity Theft
Facts on Identity Theft
Fighting Identity Theft
ID Theft

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