The Internet is Infected! The Ultimate Cyber Security Guide for Small Business and Home Computing!

If you find the information on this blog valuable you will find my upcoming three volume cyber security books infinitely more so! Visit my website at http://thatcybersecurityguy.com. My 8 years of research and 900 written pages are about much more than just cyber security as my writing presents valuable small business and general home computer knowledge. Visit me on Twitter @ThatCyberSecGuy. See the ACLU video "Invasion of the Data Snatchers" at YouTube to understand why you need my books and PDF files on the infected Internet.


Friday, December 16, 2016

Google Pixel XL Review, analysis of Google Project Fi Cellular Coverage

Before you read ThatCyberSecurityGuy Google Pixel XL 128GB blog entries reviews, I want you to pause and think about, LONG TERM VERY CHEAP CELLULAR MONTHLY PAYMENTS (in comparison to other cell phone plans), INTERNATIONAL PHONE USE IN 135 COUNTRIES FOR THE SAME PRICE AS HOME, INCREDIBLE CELLULAR AND WI-FI COVERAGE, BEST AMAZING CAMERA FRONT AND BACK, CHEAP GOOGLE CELLULAR PROJECT FI CELL PLAN ADDITIONS FOR FRIENDS AND FAMILY ON GOOGLE PHONES, 24/7 SUPPORT WITHIN MINUTES and so on...

I find that people are very stuck in the near term cost of things that they need, which costs them much more time and money in the long run (kind of like a car loan or a home mortgage as the cellular phone coverage providers, all of whom pilfer your money!)  See http://www.daveramsey.com on paying off debt!

In a previous Google Pixel blog entry I talked about how Google has cell phone coverage through Project Fi which is beyond phenomenal. On a 1,800 mile trek in our car stretching from Michigan, down Indiana, across Kentucky, through West Virginia and then over the Appalachian Mountains in Virginia, the phone never failed to make a call using the Project Fi cellular combined carrier network. Google also says the Pixel will automatically connect to over a million Wi-Fi hotspots with encryption to add to this awesome coverage. (See: https://fi.google.com/about, https://blog.google/products/project-fi/from-hi-to-fi-to-goodbye-to-invites)

Google states that Project Fi uses three carriers, two of which from their website are specified as being Sprint and T-Mobile. I found the third carrier on other websites that specified it as US Cellular and verified that with Google Project Fi technical support. This combination gives you outstanding U.S. coverage, which in my testing, have been no dead zones what-so-ever. According to TheVerge.com, Google also recently added "Three" which covers the United Kingdom, Austria, Denmark, Hong Kong, Ireland, Italy, and Sweden. In addition to this Google says Project Fi has coverage in 135+ countries internationally. (See: http://www.theverge.com/circuitbreaker/2016/7/12/12159210/google-project-fi-three-network-international-roaming-speed)

Verizon was advertising on TV that they had exclusive Pixel access (why this was not false advertising I do not know) for use on its networks for $40 a month, per person, on TV. If you visit their website there are other pricing options such as $10.00 a month plus $27.08 with a 24 month contract for qualifying customers. However, ThatCyberSecurityGuy, LLC strongly recommends against any Verizon plan with the introduction of Google's Project Fi network capabilities and coverage. Plus, T-Mobile is now offering promotional deals for unlocked Pixel phones and we can expect other carriers to continue the trend. (See: http://www.usatoday.com/story/tech/columnist/2016/10/30/google-pixels-only-verizon-pitch-isnt-what-seems/93007246)

The pricing of Project Fi is amazing for a cancel anytime cellular plan basic fee of just $20 a month. You can add up to five friends and family using other Google phones for a mere $15 a month each. For the basic fee you get (talk, text, Wi-Fi tethering, and international coverage in 135+ countries). If anyone needs data usage and does not have Wi-Fi available, then Google charges a flat $10 per GB for cellular data while in the U.S. and abroad for everyone in your plan. For example, 1GB of cellular data is $10/month, 2GB is $20/month, 3GB is $30/month, and so on as everyone uses cellular data (tell the kids they must be connected to Wi-Fi when using data!).

What is weird is that Google makes you sign up for a minimum of 1GB of data per month on your Project Fi plan for $10 a month. However, you get credited for the full value of your unused data so why bother? You can also estimate the amount of data that you think you will use by signing up for any greater amount. For example, if you sign up for 3GB for $30 and only use 1.4GB one month, you would get $16 back, so you only pay for what you use.

The bottom line is that Project Fi is a revolution in cellular network pricing and coverage if you don't mind Wi-Fi data only usage. Granted the $921 price tag for a 5.5-inch Pixel with 128GB of storage plus taxes is a humdinger to get past! However, this is competitive with the iPhone and the Samsung Galaxy S7 pricing, which when purchased for a specific network are LOCKED into those individual networks. You will eventually make back what you spend on Pixel in monthly costs. For example, the Walmart AT&T Go plan costs $45 a month for unlimited everything. If you pay $25 a month for Project Fi coverage you will make back the entire cost of the phone in 46 months. I admit that seems like a LONG TIME but I feel the Pixel features will be adequate for my business for years to come. Oh yeah, did I mention the Pixel has the highest rated smartphone camera, ever, December 2016.

The OS also has Google Assistant built in, which can answer just about any question you can come up with. The Google Assistant also ties into other apps on the phone such as maps so all you have to do is say, "OK Google, give me directions to Timbuktu" and Sha-zam/Gall-lee, you are getting step-by-step directions without typing a thing.

There is also the benefit of how it ties into and presents your text messaging and Gmail. These features are in your face as soon as you light up the screen by pressing the side activation button. No more rummaging around to get to your text messages, voice mail and such, which I really love.

OK, enough is enough as I sound like an advertisement for Google which I don't what to do because of privacy concerns. There are things wrong with the phone which you can find on YouTube and other websites. It was not the phone but Project Fi that sold me on the Pixel as my next generation business phone. For example, I feel the speaker sucks coming out of the bottom of the phone. It is OK for a quiet place but if you are out walking with traffic and want to carry on a conversation with either the speaker or with the phone to your ear you can hardly hear anything.

Wednesday, November 30, 2016

Google Pixel XL 128GB cell phone combined with Project Fi Wi-Fi it will change the world!

I'm sure the price that I paid was insane at $921 for the whole package which included a soon to be coming VR set (no longer available). My saving off the current $45 monthly cell phone bill with Google Project Fi cell phone plan will pay for the phone about four years and my small business needed something more reliable than the very old Samsung Galaxy S2 with AT&T, with which proved impossible to conduct radio talk show interviews and dropped calls often.

If Apple and Samsung want to send me phones to review, I will be happy to give them a comparison test but that is NOT going to happen. Since I don't give bias reviews for products, no corporation on earth is going to give up a FREE product for a questionable review. This means, ThatCyberSecurityGuy, LLC pays FULL price out of pocket for any product we review, which is fine, but understand that this limits what we can review but does keep our reviews VERY HONEST.

Coverage

I have only had the Pixel phone less than a month but having traveled over 1800 Thanksgiving miles in my car with the phone I can now say that the voice coverage under Project Fi is beyond astounding. I have had former phones on the T-Mobile, AT&T and Verizon networks with dead spots everywhere. Verizon had the best coverage but that is becoming an ever-narrowing margin.

Project Fi's coverage with three LTE partners and Wi-Fi was astounding, to say the least. I hiked up, and drove up and down mountains, I tried voice on the phone in the depths of my Mothers and my basement (no other smartphone has ever worked there before), I hiked trails where no other network/cell phone has ever performed, and the Google Pixel Project Fi Network phone never failed. I pestered my wife to keep making calls in former dead spots to see what would happen and ALL calls went through (she got a little annoyed!). I might as well have had a land line connected to the phone. (See https://fi.google.com/about).

GPS Directions

I tried out the GPS, which my wife has with her Samsung Galaxy S4 and I think the Pixel did better with the new Android OS. The Pixel was flawless, giving us bottom speaker directions that were very detailed and easy to follow. It kind of made me mad that I can't complain about how my wife's GPS sent us into fields and that I could follow a written map to a better conclusion. It was nice having it tell me to get into the left or right lane and to prepare to take an exit or to turn a few miles in advance.

Battery Life

The phone purchased from Google did not come with bloatware draining the battery. Therefore, the quick charge battery life is amazing. I have not loaded up the phone with apps but I have installed a few such as Netflix and Hulu. Watching video on Netflix and Hulu is amazing with Wi-Fi. It is a little mini movie theater. I was also going to try out Amazon Prime but Amazon wanted access to everything on my phone, which I was not willing to grant being a private person. I suggest to Amazon that in the future they offer a privacy limited access options.

Sunday, November 27, 2016

Google Pixel XL review and Project Fi cellular coverage, awesome and cheap together over time!

OK, I admit that this blog entry is coming from someone who has existed in the cell phone Dark Ages for years. That revelation from ThatCyberSecurityGuy, LLC might seem amazing but as a cyber security business I don't like having the whole world spying on everything I do. Therefore, I was in no hurry to upgrade to the latest spying stupid phone at great expense to my business. However, in this day and age, I need the most advanced, "spied upon" technology to conduct my business. The Google Pixel encrypts all my Wi-Fi activity, which we will get into, so it is a compromise.

I was using a Samsung Galaxy S2, which I had upgraded to the JellyBean Android OS until November 2016.  I started out with the S2 on the T-Mobile Walmart family plan, and then had mixed feelings. It worked OK, but was dropping calls as I moved around. T-Mobile, back in the day, did not have great coverage years ago but the savings on a $144 a month Verizon plan was amazing. I eventually converted the phone over to AT&T's Walmart Go plan, which was much better coverage but still not great at $45 a month. Calls were still dropped when I traveled and visited friends and family, AT&T had its dead spots as well. I have been watching the cell phone market for years trying to find the right deal to make a new plunge into the 21st century and the new Google Pixel phone combined with their Project Fi coverage plan was it. As I conduct radio, and hopefully TV interviews and such, I can no longer afford to have a phone that drops calls or have audio that is not clear in dead zones or on speaker.

ThatCyberSecurityGuy was expecting the phone to be priced similarly to their Nexus phone at about $499 but in October or 2016, had a stroke when the price was $649 for the base model in October of 2016. I expected and wondered if the price would come down for some sort of holiday special if I waited but all indications were definitely NOT after calling the Google sales team! An irrelevant detail (except to my wife) was that Google offered a FREE Virtual Reality headset with an early October purchase of the phone and that sealed the deal for me. I have friends who have VRs that let me try them out on their iPhones / Samsung Galaxy's and I can't wait to see what Google has come up with. My VR headset is still on backorder and I will review it in December when I get it. I imagine the headset will sell for near $100.

Now here is heart attack number two, as the base 5" model only came with 32GB of memory. To upgrade to the 5.5" (I'm old and need BIG) and to increase the memory to 128GB brought the price of the phone up to $921 with taxes! In my wife's words, "you are out of your mind if you think paying $921 for a phone is a good idea," and I had to agree at first. I questioned my judgment, as the excitement factor for me was raging, as I had waited years for this phone. This is the first truly Google phone they have produced since for years they contracted out their other Nexus phones, which were released in 2015 and in my opinion, was substandard.

Given the entire above, why did ThatCyberSecurityGuy, LLC make the plunge into the new and very expensive Google Pixel phone:
  1. If you watch TV, Verizon is advertising the Pixel as an exclusively Verizon phone for a contract (how this is legal I do not know). Anyone who buys into a Verizon Pixel phone plan is a fool. I'm not trying to be cruel, I just state reality. Google has Project Fi https://fi.google.com/about, which is a wireless service from Google where they are partnered with three leading national carriers to give you access to three 4G LTE tower providers for faster speeds in more locations.
  2. The phone, with Project Fi, will also connect to over a million Wi-Fi hotspots as it automatically shifts over for faster calling, data and texting. This is all done with encryption to keep your data safe.
  3. OK, I admit I have dreams of international travel for my business. The Pixel with Project Fi offers in Google's words, "Unthrottled high-speed data works in over 135 different countries and territories. No need to call ahead for a different plan. You'll pay the same price for data that you do at home."
  4. My wife retired April 2016 and I'm a disabled veteran. I work to reduce monthly costs at every opportunity I can find. Project Fi starts at $20 per month and $10 per GB of data. If you are connected to Wi-Fi you don't have to worry about data and I'm connected about 90% of the time with this phone. Therefore, my cell phone bill is reduced from $45 on the AT&T Go plan for unlimited (Text, Data, Voice) to $20 per month. Even at the $921 cost the phone will rapidly pay for itself.

Saturday, September 3, 2016

Beware of liars, the new cheap smartphone solution, how Apple was right!

All my blog entries are normally edited but I decided to post this one (unwisely) without editing. This is not a solution per se entry but a list of what is to come on this blog. Originally this blog included investing advice but I found it too difficult without insider knowledge to read behind the lines to guide investors. There are just too many liars in the money and investment world to really figure out where to put your hard earned dollars for me to read the tea leaves. The only advice I can give you is read everything you can and try to find the least diseased trees in the forest and invest in small amounts. I have won more than lost so I will now post a little investment advice.
  1.  The government is lying to you if you think your 401K or IRA are safe. You need to move some of your portfolio (10% to 25%) to hard investments. However, there are many gold/hard asset investment scams also. Buyer beware as everyone is out there to rip off everyone else! The only two (my opinion after research and depending on questionable things like BBB ratings) are http://www.monex.com and http://www.swissamerica.com who are both my brokers for hard assets.
  2. I really want to give you more advice such as what preferred stock I like, no-load mutual funds with low expense ratios, bonds I like an so on to invest in but I have had very mixed results. Some investments I have taken no action on hoping for recovery have reached zero, others I have sold after taking huge losses and sold only to see them recover from the thousands I lost making no sense. Others I have read news how they could never succeed such as Netflix after they went head to head with BlockBuster. I sold at $15 making a nice profit. The stock went to $256.
  3. Occasionally you find a neighbor or business associate who deal honestly with you. Value them and give them money and it will pay off.
What is coming on this blog:

I'm working on cutting the cellphone bill with a HUGE NEW better smartphone release from Google. It has been leaked the phone will have a new, advanced Android OS, come in small and large sizes (my eyes need the LARGE size), integrated with Google in October. This phone will operate and work on all networks including AT&T, Sprint, T-Mobile, and Verizon. It is roomer-ed it will sell for about $600 so you can purchase and use no contract plans such as http://sale.totalwireless.com or https://www.att.com/shop/wireless/gophone.html among others. As with everything else I write about on this blog it will be and unbiased review with no financial incentive from any company. I get offered free technical devices and turn them down to keep my reviews believable.

For another blog entry based on my book:

I predicted that the back-doors, spying hardware and spying software built in to products by the NSA would one day be leaked and other countries would utilize them to hack the whole world.  This article by the Washington Post https://www.washingtonpost.com/world/national-security/powerful-nsa-hacking-tools-have-been-revealed-online/2016/08/16/bce4f974-63c7-11e6-96c0-37533479f3f5_story.html shows that many, if not all the hacks the NSA has forced on companies have been leaked and our enemies are using them. These hacks would not be posted-leaked on the Internet if they had not been is use by foreign powers for quite some time. NSA how now set up every American and American company to be hacked by everyone!

This was what my book was all about and how to keep yourself from being hacked even with these backdoors. For example, I have promoted putting tape over your computer webcam for quite some time.  Turns out that is now common advice! I also talked about using German encryption because it does not have back-doors.

Sunday, August 7, 2016

Installing Windows 10

This blog entry is a continuation of my blog post titled, “How to upgrade Windows 7 to Windows 10 Safely”. Hopefully, you follow my blog and have upgraded to Windows 10 before the FREE offer ended on July 29, 2016. In that blog entry, I walked you through the upgrade process and briefly talked about creating Windows 10 install media in the event of a hard drive failure. Back in October 2015, I speculated that you might be able to use the Windows 10 installation media to upgrade other computers, if you had licensed copies of Windows 7.  Since 2011, I have had Windows 7 running on my computer server and could not find the time to attempt installing or upgrading to Windows 10 after it came out last year.  With the free upgrade deadline fast approaching, I had to make the plunge. (See:  https://support.microsoft.com/en-us/help/12435/windows-10-upgrade-faq)

If you did upgrade, I instructed you to burn a Windows 10 install DVD, which I was not sure would work with other computers.  Since the deadline has passed, this blog entry is about installing Windows 10 and the problems that you may encounter.
  1. If your hard drives have data or an OS be sure to zero them.  I recommend using MiniTool’s FREE Partition Wizard Home Edition tool, which is amazing.  Download the ISO file and burn it to a CD or load it on a USB drive.  If you are running RAID, as I was, bust it apart in the BIOS leaving every drive visible to the tool.  Pressing the DELETE key on boot uploaded my BIOS settings and from there I clicked on the Advanced tab -> SATA Configuration -> SB SATA Configuration.  From there, change the SATA Port1 – Port4 and SATA Port5 – Port6 from RAID to AHCI.    (See:  http://www.minitool.com/download-center/partition-manager-download.html, https://www.partitionwizard.com/partition-wizard-bootable-cd.html)
  2. When done zeroing the hard drives, put the RAID back together by reversing the BIOS directions in step one.  After saving the BIOS RAID settings, you have to enter the AMD RAID disk pairing BIOS.  On my server, I did so by typing Ctrl-F6 upon boot up.  Pair your hard drives and reboot.  Now here is a critical step that I had failed to do, upon boot up pause the BIOS to make sure the disks are indeed, paired properly.  In my case, they were not but I did not know that as the RAID BIOS screen zipped by upon boot up.  It was later after I had spent a few days loading and configuring Windows 10 on a single disk that I learned my RAID 1 configuration was deprecated.  It was hard to catch but I learned that hitting the PAUSE/Break during boot up revealed the following RAID status, which if I could have seen the messages flying by it would have revealed:
RAID option ROM version 3.3.1540.17
© 2011 Advanced Micro Devices, Inc. All Rights Reserved
ID     LD Name     LD Size         Status
01     OSRAID1     1999.99G    Critical
02     DATARAID1  1999.99G  Functional

Port ID        Device Name
01:01           ST32000641AS     <S.M.A.R.T. Health> <Single Disk 03>

Hit the Break Key to pause BIOS

Problem is detected with Array:01 Critical Status:

A disk member of an array has failed or is not responding.
Please refer to your AMD User Manual for further details.
Press <Ctrl-F> to enter RAID Option ROM utility.


Was this a disaster or what?  I could not have my main computer server running without a functional RAID mirror, so I set about correcting it.  After scouring the Internet for solutions, I downloaded and installed AMD’s RAIDXPERT utility.  However, after installation it would not work under Windows 10. Therefore, I had no choice but to enter the RAID ROM BIOS at boot up and join the disks manually.  I was afraid this would destroy all my work on the server, so I created a system image on my backup device, which I recommend you do from time to time.  (See:  http://support.amd.com/en-us/download/chipset?os=Windows%2010%20-%2064)
  1. Creating a system image in Windows 10 is not as straightforward as it was in Windows 7.  For example, if you type system image in the Ask me anything box, it just brings up a bunch of Internet search solutions.  However, if you type backup you will see Backup and Restore (Windows 7), which brings up the old Windows 7 Backup or restore your files dialog.  On the left panel under Control Panel Home, click on Create a system image to back up your OS and data.  You should do this periodically so that you can always move back to a restore point.
  2. Once the imaging is complete, Windows 10 will prompt you to create a System Repair Disk.  If you do not have one already, you should do this.  Do not miss the critical step that I did, which is to test the disk by booting from it.  I had two System Repair Disks and could not boot from either one without error after I had destroyed my server again.  My solution was to boot from the Windows 10 installation disk that I had created back in October 2015 and use that to restore my system from the backup image.

The remaining steps are detailed in my book and PDF products on my website at http://thatcybersecurityguy.com. Now that you’re imaged, your computer has to be configured and loaded up with software such as Office, Visio, PowerPoint, MapPoint, Corel Paint Shop Pro, Video Studio, Dragon Naturally Speaking and so on.  There is also a ton of open source software that I talked about in my book. such as CCleaner, PuTTY, gVim, Speccy, SeaMonkey, Firefox, FileZilla, Notepad++, Mozilla Thunderbird, VLC Media Player, Revo Uninstalled, PDFMate,  and so on.

My next blog entry will be about the setup and use of Windows 10 Hyper-V to run a bunch of Linux OSs on the second RAID 1 mirror in my computer server.  I have already started on this and I hope to have guest OSs running on the server in no time.  All the Linux OSs (Fedora, Kali, Mint, OpenSUSE, Ubuntu) are downloaded and ready to install.  In my book I detail how to do this using both VMware Player and Oracle VirtualBox.  This will be my first foray into using the Windows 10 Hyper-V virtualization solution.

Saturday, June 4, 2016

Battle of the Indoor TV Antennas, Last blog entry on Cutting the Cable Cord!

It took four months, a lot of phone calls and emails, but finally, a cable technician climbed the telephone pole at the back of my house and cut the cable cord once and for all… it was a disturbing moment for me emotionally as my family has not been without cable for 20 years.

For local channels I decided to experiment with indoor antennas. I have three LED TVs for which I wanted to have local antenna channels. I did a lot of research but could not figure out which indoor antenna to purchase.  My original thought was to buy the best rated antenna and split the signal to the three TVs. However, once the first antenna arrived I realized that splitting the signal would be impractical as my TVs are far from each other, thus requiring long cable runs degrading the antenna signal. Therefore, I decided to have a “BATTLE OF THE TV ANTENNAS” by purchasing three different name brand antennas and seeing which one did the best. After a lot of research I settled on the following three name brands:
  1. 1byone Amplified HDTV Antenna - 50 Mile Range with Detachable Amplifier Power Supply for the Highest Performance and 10ft Coax Cable an Amazon Best Seller.
  2. Winegard FlatWave Amped FL5500A Amplified Digital Indoor HD TV Antenna (OTA / High-VHF / UHF / Ultra-Thin / Black and White - Reversible / USB Power Supply) - 50 Mile Long Range. Best specifications as they claim to have the best quality components.
  3. Mohu Leaf 50 TV Antenna, Indoor, Amplified, 50 Mile Range, Original Paper-thin, Reversible, Paintable, 4K-Ready HDTV, 16 Foot Detachable Cable, Premium Materials for Performance, USA Made, MH-110584.
I justified this expense to my wife by pointing out that we would be saving $70 a month on the cable bill and have the antennas paid for in less than three months. The argument did not go well but once I got everything setup she came onboard with the project after each antenna pulled in about 40 local channels near Detroit.
NOTE: Analog TVs will not work with these digital TV antennas, as by law, there are not any stations broadcasting in analog anymore. To use these antennas, your best bet is to purchase a new TV with a digital tuner, if you don’t have one already. I recommend the 55” TCL Smart Ultra Roku TV at Costco with a SquareTrade extended warranty for an additional $30.

First off, I had some crazy stuff happening. When I hooked up the antennas to my 8-year old digital Visio TV, it would scan for channels reporting back that it found between 40 to 48 channels and then the screen was blank. I was clueless and tried everything I could think of such as swapping antennas. By accident, I unplugged everything and when I powered everything back up again, the local channel antenna was working fine to the Visio TV. Riddle me that one batman!

Each antenna is easy to mount with the two way tape that comes with them. Since we will be moving in one year I chose to use masking tape and save the two-way tape for my next home. My wife hates it, but having the antennas taped to the wall with masking tape does not look all that bad to me. I imagine when we go to sell the house I will have to come up with some other mounting solution but for now, masking tape in the room’s upper corner looks just fine.

Now to the meat and potatoes which is my evaluation of the three indoor leaf TV antennas:
  • The 1byone was the cheapest and most popular at Amazon for a reason. It pulled in about the same number of channels as the Winegard and Mohu but for a cheaper price. However, you get what you pay for as this antenna could not match the performance of the Winegard or the Mohu. I had distortion on some channels since it pulled in less clear channels.
  • The Winegard was awesome in the number of channels it pulled in, but most of the new channels were distorted going in and out, so they might as well not have been found. However, this is an awesome antenna that is a solid purchase and I believe Winegard does have superior components. The fact that it found stations the others did not reflects that it is better quality.
  • Even though the Winegard may have excellent construction, the Mohu Leaf took the prize! The first thing I loved was that the cable was detachable at the antenna. You would think that this would be standard in all the antennas but with the 1byone and Winegard, the cable is a permanent attachment to the antenna. This makes mounting these antennas a pain in the a$$ and if it becomes damaged or if you want a cable of superior quality or length to the one attached, it does not allow for replacing the cable. Next, the Mohu pulled in fewer channels than the Winegard but those channels were clear. Lastly, the Mohu comes with one side black and the other side white. Depending on what your paint color is, you can choose the visible side that blends in best with your wall paint. If you are married let you spouse choose the color as I thought black on brown paint went better than white on brown paint but that was not the case.
I hope this and previous blog entries will help you to cut the cable cord once and for all as their $130 a month days are numbered. I know letting go of cable will be an emotional event and my 80 year old mother would never consider a change such as this, but you can. I have shown how to do this step-by-step with the purchase of TCL Roku Smart TVs and indoor TV antennas. More than likely you probably already own high-speed wireless Internet for streaming video. I chose Netflix, Amazon Prime, and Hulu, but there are many other streaming options for you from which to choose. My solution does not give you ESPN but you have local antenna channels for some sports viewing. My solution does not give you national channels such as CNN and FOX News but they really don’t give you news anyway; I call it infotainment, not news!

With all my research and work, you can now cut the cable cord and save about $75 a month. You will have over 200,000 entertainment options by doing so for less than what an LED TV used to cost a few years ago. The choice is up to you as I have done all I can to help you - with no affiliations, sponsors, and using my own money putting it all where my mouth is!

Here ends ThatCyberSecurityGuy's series of blog entries on cutting the cable cord.

Wednesday, May 4, 2016

How I cut the cable cord by replacing 5 old cabled TVs cheaply



If you enjoy sports and our entertainment news stations such as CNN and Fox News then I don’t have the answer except for a local sports bar or an Internet cellphone, laptop or computer. Sling TV is good for ESPN but at $20 a month you don’t get anything near what Amazon Prime, Netflix, and Hulu offer in other TV shows and movie entertainment options. We will talk about antennas for local TV stations in my next blog entry which may be the solution you need.

In 2015, I finally convinced my wife that LED TVs were relatively cheap and we should purchase one. Moreover, with Amazon Fire TV Stick and Roku, I was thinking about how we could cut the cable cord. I was looking and studying hard as I learned about streaming services such as Hulu, Amazon Prime, and we already had and were experienced with streaming Netflix. Even at today’s prices, getting a 48 inch or greater size LED TV along with a $40 Fire TV Stick or Roku Streaming stick at $45 was out of our price range. Then I came across the 48 inch TCL TV at Costco with Roku built-in for $400 (now $330). Who the hell is TCL, I asked? After a lot of research, I found that they provide parts to many of the big name TV makers and decided to put together their own TV product to market in the U.S. thus cutting out the middleman. They are offering these TVs cheap to establish themselves as a player to be ranked against the (probably former) big boys (i.e., Samsung, Sony, and Sharp).

Step 1

Even with this great price I was not willing to roll the dice on a TCL TV until I talked with a knowledgeable Costco TV guru. He explained that TCL TVs were not coming back broken and that I could purchase a Square Trade warranty for a mere $30. I was skeptical until he informed me that Square Trade is for real and that they will come to my house to fix the TV if anything goes wrong with it during the 2 year Costco Concierge plus 3 year extended warranty period. I was sold and brought the TCL TV home. I felt that getting 5 years of 48-inch TV viewing entertainment was worth $430 and I hope the TV will last a lot longer. Plus getting to recycle the TV box right away, not needing it to ship for possible warranty repair, with an in home warranty is cool.

Step 2

I moved the 30 pound 720p Visio TV up to my office and recycled the 120 pound 20 year old analog CRT my mom had given me. I hooked the cable up to that TV’s digital tuner directly and took back both the digital cable box in the living room and digital box that was hooked up to the office analog TV. Cost thus far $440 with taxes, cost saving thus far $9.00 a month. My wife was skeptical as it would take 47 months to recover the cost of the TCL Roku TV if we kept cable. However, that was not my overall goal.

I hooked up the 48-inch TCL in the living Room and became amazed. At first, I hated the simple remote as it has no channel or last viewed buttons but if you stream multiple services as I do now it is OK. It is kind of awkward for cable but you get used to scrolling through the channels. My one recommendation to TCL is to add ‘Last’ and ‘Hulu’ buttons. The remote comes with Netflix, Amazon, Rdio and Vudu buttons.

Step 3

I knew that making my wife part with her $13 a month cable DVR and 50-inch 160 pound plasma TV was going to be difficult. I analyzed all the options and the only thing I could come up with was another 48” TCL Roku TV. My first step was purchasing Amazon Prime for $99, which I sold her on for the FREE 2-day shipping they offer. We have three stepdaughters and she likes to buy and ship them things from time to time. Plus, I admit, I’m an Amazon addict as I love the deals and discounts they offer with free shipping to my door.

Once all the streaming options kicked in on the TCL Roku TV she rather enjoyed Amazon streaming on our living room TV but she still opted for her 50-inch cable DVR recorded programs in the bedroom. The very old bedroom DVD player was incapable of streaming Amazon and only offered Netflix from their instant queue on that old plasma TV.


Therefore, streaming Netflix and Amazon had not baited the hook and I was not sure where to turn. After a few months with this setup I finally concluded that my only alternative was to give away our awesome $1400 fifty-inch, 160-pound plasma TV and mount a 48-inch 27-pound TCL LED Roku TV in the bedroom. I watched for a deal at Costco and jumped on a $50 rebate for another 48-inch TCL Roku TV making the cost $350. I have not calculated the energy savings but TCL says running their TVs only cost $17 a year which I’m sure is major advantage over the 50” old energy hungry plasma TV.

After another 3-year Square Trade warranty and taxes I was out another $400 and I had to give away the 50-inch 160-pound plasma TV to my young neighbors. However, in my defense, that plasma TV was over 10 years old, I got free moving help as my neighbor wanted the TV for his garage, and non-HD pictures from cable were being cut off 360 degrees making watching anything annoying. In addition we are planning to move in the next year or two and I did not want to pay movers to properly handle that 160-pound plasma TV properly. I thought about just leaving it behind but I can imagine people buying the house demanding it be removed.

To keep my wife happy I opted to purchase Hulu for local TV shows. This replaced her $13 a month DVR for $12 and gave her many more options from which to choose. She now had Netflix, Amazon Prime and with the addition of Hulu I hoped that would be enough for her in the evenings.

Step 4

Now I had a dilemma as to what hardware to put where in order to break the cable cord and maximize all our entertainment options and keep my wife happy. Buying more TCL TVs was not going to solve the problem nor would she permit that understandably. It was not going to be easy, for example, I enjoyed CNBC on the bathroom TV in the mornings to see what the stock market was doing. In the basement, I did not want to do without cable TV as I treadmill for an hour each day. In my attic office, I did not want to be without mindless background noise with the occasional TV infotainment broadcast to view when I needed a break from working on the computer and paperwork. Here is what I came up with:
  1. I moved the Play Station 3 from the TV room to the attic office so we could stream everything to the old 720p Visio digital TV. We have a small house and my dining room was too small for physical games, so I wanted to try the office with the PS3.
  2. The bathroom already had a Samsung DVD player capable of streaming that worked OK. I someday want to replace this TV but that can wait until we move.
  3. The bedroom was good to go with the new TCL streaming Roku TV and old DVD player to keep my wife happy with the ability to play the occasional DVD.
  4. The basement 120 pound treadmill analog TV will have to wait. We have accumulated a lot of VCR tapes and DVDs that TV can play so I can make due.
As crazy as it sounds, I was still not ready to cut the cable cord as I had an office working dilemma. Many years ago a distant friend of mine had an upholstery business. One thing I found interesting was he had a TV on all day while he worked. I asked him if that was distracting and he said, “yes, when I want it to be, when I need a break.” I did not understand at the time but I did later writing my 900 page book. It is great to have mindless stuff on a TV while you work to occasionally distract you. Streaming video with no commercials is too engaging so I needed a local TV antenna.

Saturday, April 30, 2016

TV and Phone Plans from the past that we all have to get past!


I have been on a quest for many years to simplify and lower the cost of our very expensive cable TV, entertainment and Internet smartphone services. Given the above hardware configuration with multiple TVs without tuners, I had been in a quandary for years.

I have tried many things, from streaming Netflix on DVD players to Netflix snail mail DVDs and so on. First we purchased a DVD player for the bedroom but it is very old and only streams the Netflix queue. Then we bought one for the bathroom that streams a lot of stuff we had never heard of and were not willing to pay for in addition to Netflix and Cable. Upon further investigation, it is amazing and as good as Roku with firmware and app updates. It now streams thousands of shows with many options from which to choose.  However, I admit that took a bit of work on my part.

I have seen many crazy things over the years, such as my wife buying DVDs at Redbox while we were able to stream and get DVDs from Netflix and so on. The re-evaluation/transition of entertainment technology that has taken place in the last six years has been astronomical and you need to take/make a note of the change and consider your options. The change has happened so fast you need to educate your family on what is available and how to get at it before you continue to spend money on the way things used to be.

For example, my mother uses Direct TV and I have also looked at Dish TV for her and us. Because I have many large trees nearby these satellite services were never an option for my family and changing things for my mother was a bad idea unless the savings is huge, which it was not. However, being the miser (Grinch I am), I hate her giving away money to Verizon when I could get her so much more for less. For example, I would like to get her an unlimited $45 Straight Talk or AT&T Go plan at Walmart with a smartphone instead of her VERY EXPENSIVE Verizon plan using a very old talk only cellphone. She is paying that while maintaining a land line! Her phone bills are near $100 a month and she hardly ever even uses her phones. She is 78 and does not want to change.

I have also contemplated the advantages of universal AT&T DSL versus broadband from my local cable TV providers. Once a year I have had to call on my local cable provider to renegotiate our contract getting such things as free DVR rental for a year, which has been very tiresome. All I have ever wanted was a good universal entertainment/Smartphone/Internet/Household option that did not cost hundreds of dollars a month and simplified our lives. Reducing the cost of renting cable equipment is an annual phone call event that all Americans don’t need in their lives. There are M-Type Cable cards that can free us from expensive cable bills but this is a roll of the dice at best with your local cable provider.

As a result of my cable bill going nuclear expensive (for basic cable and Internet), I have spent years researching how to reduce this bill and still provide the same or more entertainment, news, weather and other coverage options.  I approached this task willing to spend any amount of money (within household reason [no more $1200 plasma TVs]) on hardware with a long term vision of saving a few dollars in the long run. Many of us live month to month and cutting the cable cord to save up the money for new equipment makes a lot of sense if we can do it.

Why do I want to keep my 5 TVs, please let me explain, my household is one of those crazy places where I have TVs are needed everywhere to watch the news, stock market and so on. In years past, three of them did not have digital tuners and things needed to change.

For example, I have a computer lab where I had a very old CRT TV that I like to have on for background noise as silence and the radio does nothing for me.  It is great to be distracted by the occasional TV event or story before you get back to some serious work. I was paying $3.00 a month for this privilege plus the energy cost.

Friday, April 29, 2016

How we came to own 5 TVs, other streaming Internet devices, and how you might relate

Before we move forward in time giving you all my streaming solutions we have to move back in time. OK, I admit my wife and I are unusual in that we our have gotten used to TVs in many places in our house (mostly me). The TVs just kind of multiplied over the years. My first story is when my 20-year old stepdaughter destroyed the downstairs bathroom, for the second time. While my wife and I were gone on vacation, the water pipe burst and rather than turn off the water using the basement valve, she allowed water to pour over the bathroom floor, basement joists, dumping water on everything on the basement floor for days! When we asked her about this, it was a minor leak and nothing to really worry about. Rather than ask a neighbor how to stop the disaster… you get the picture. The bathroom floor never caved in but some joists under the floor finally cracked open. My $10,000 bathroom remodeling project turned into a lot more pain and expense when she moved out. In for a penny in for a pound so I put in a Jacuzzi tub paying contractors to reinforce the floor and replace the floor joists. While on vacations, I have sat in small Jacuzzi tubs without entertainment and things get boring fast. Reading in these tubs is next to impossible. We only had room for a small tub so I had to have TV entertainment. It was years ago when I mounted a very expensive 23 inch SONY LCD TV without a built-in digital tuner in the corner next to the bathroom door. The TV is now worthless for the most part but still has a good picture and has survived a lot a bathroom steam. I will leave it behind when we move.

20 years ago, my brother died in a car accident and left me his 35-inch CRT TV. That became our living room TV for many years and I think it weighed about 300+ pounds. When I got cancer, the fellas at work pitched in and bought me a 48-inch Visio 720p LCD TV. We replaced the CRT with that and yes that 300+ pound CRT was properly recycled.

Then there were the romantic evenings on cold nights in the bedroom. We live in the North so getting out of our warm bed and bedroom to cuddle in the freezing cold living room to watch TV got old fast. We saved up and found a sale at Costco, $1,500 for a 42” LCD TV. When we marched in, they had a massive 50-inch plasma for $250 less but it weighed 150 pounds. I’m a woodworker so I knew I could get it mounted on the wall. This sucker had a digital tuner and was 720p, which was all the rage at that time and 1080p TV was selling for over $2,000.

Then my wife wanted a treadmill and TV in the basement. Many years ago we purchased a CRT flat screen DVD/VCR for the basement to watch while treadmilling with, once again, no digital tuner in the TV. She had to have the VCR even though LCD TVs were out and much better.

About 10 years ago my mom wanted new digital LCD TVs for her and dad (cable was getting rid of analog broadcast) so she donated her analog 27 inch CRT TV to me. I put that sucker up in our office, but once again no digital tuner. However, I became hooked on having the TV as background noise which I worked on the computer and paperwork. I found that my brain would need a rest from time to time and I would watch shows repeatedly and look up at the good parts of the show. Transformers a dozen times were perfect while I worked.

Then on February 17, 2009, my analog world ended. Cable companies were about to make a fortune on renting digital-to-analog converter boxes for my TVs. This tied us into a digital cable DVR for $13 a month, a digital box at $6.00 a month, and three digital tuners at $3.00 a month each, which equals $28 a month in cable fees. I investigated other options but everything I investigated at the time was a dead end. I even purchased an antenna for the office TV but it was a digital antenna and my CRT TV was analog. Plus all the TV stations were either transitioning or already broadcasting in digital TV formats. When the cable bill hit $125+ a month I knew things had to change! The simple answer was to give up a TV everywhere in my house, but I was a TV Addict used to viewing it anywhere. I chose to pay the cable bill expecting to come up with a solution any day but life throws curves you can never expect. After surviving cancer twice and sitting in my recliner day after day, I enjoyed my cable TV!  The fellas at work buying me the 720p Visio TV had done well and I never worried about the expense of the other four TVs… until now.

Sunday, April 24, 2016

Cutting the Cable Cord, Confessions of a TV Addict with 5 TVs!

 Getting rid of the Cable or Satellite TV bill to have more Entertainment Options for Less!

This series of ThatCyberSecurityGuy blog entries took years of experimentation, limited technology purchases over years of study, near death experiences, and a lot of dedication as life moved on during the recent years of our entertainment world’s revolution. As smartphones and other devices leave the PC and laptop world behind (somewhat), so has the streaming TV content world left satellite and cable TV behind! Years ago, for the most part, power hungry Plasma TVs quickly came and went. Less power hungry Liquid-Crystal-Display (LCD TV) were rapidly replaced with more energy-efficient and high-quality picture LED TVs. Writing and researching my book “The Internet is Infected!” for five years did not allow me the luxury to investigate TV entertainment technology to cut the cable cord before now. The truth is this cheap technology was not available back then and I was too busy launching my business, attending classes along with a multitude of other things. However, a major priority in the evenings, I would always set aside a few moments of fun time to just surf the web and read about the inconsequential entertainment options in hopes of cutting our monthly expenses and cable cord was a major priority! I’m happy to say, that moment has come at last!  You can negotiate your download speed with an ISP.

Advantages:
  1. Significant savings, our bill for cable + Internet was $129 a month.
  2. Comcast Xfinity Internet Blast offered Internet download speed up to 150 Mbps for $60 a month.
  3. AT&T U-verse HSIA 75 was $35 a month for a 1-year term with a download speed of up to 75 Mbps.
  4. Wowway.com had $25 a month for a 30 Mbps download speed.
Disadvantages:
  1. Sling streaming service for $20 will give you access to ESPN and other channels that the other streaming services do not provide.
  2. Hulu streaming service for $12.00 a month, Hulu only streams in 720p.
  3. Netflix streaming service is $9.00 a month but it does not offer downloads.  Content can be dated.
  4. Amazon Prime is $99.00 a year or $8.25 a month but that does include free 2-day shipping on orders purchased.
  5. Streaming will go in and out if/when your ISP has problems. You will find your devices losing reception more frequently than cable TV. To ensure that you can stream to your smart or Roku TVs you may need to pay your ISP for a maintenance plan. When the squirrels chew on the cable leading to your house you don’t want to face a $200 bill to have a service technician to replace that cable.
  6. Streaming requires a bit of configuration, work and initial set up of all your Internet devices. This leads to security concerns as the inclination is that once everything is set up to leave the status quo. The reality is that you should be changing your passwords at least once a year, but even I admit that I have not done that. Roku wanted a credit card and personal information for me to pay my Hulu bill, for example. If a hacker gets in there I’m in trouble. Same goes for Netflix and Amazon.
  7. Streaming devices require maintenance. The firmware and apps have regular updates.  This can be annoying when you are settling in for the evening and just want immediate gratification. If you don’t have built in Roku or smart TV streaming you will have the added expense of purchasing these devices separately, which can be unsightly and require an extra cabling expense. However, cable TV devices, often require the same cabling.
  8. Without Internet devices such as computers, Smartphones, and Tablets you may miss such things as the latest sporting events, infotainment news from CNN, CNBC, FOX, and HLN. However, if you have a browser and Internet access there are usually other options for this type of viewing.  For example, CBS made the Super Bowl available to a broad range of streaming devices without login.  So yes, even after cutting the cable cord I could stream the Super Bowl to my Roku TV having the annual party or I could have traveled to my local American Legion hall or a sports bar to get rowdy with the folks.
I chose Amazon Prime, Hulu, and Netflix as our streaming bundle. Here are my reasons why:
  1. Netflix is the biggest streaming service in the United States. It has an amazing movie collection and catalog of TV titles, sometimes months old and a great selection of old films. It also has original content such as “House of Cards”.
  2. Amazon Video on Demand has over 75,000 of your favorite movies and hit TV shows.  Amazon, like Netflix, has a good offering of old and new hits for movies but unlike Netfilx, it has for a price, more current U.S. TV shows including premium cable shows from HBO and Showtime for a price. It also has original content such as “Transparent, Alpha House, and Mozart in the Jungle” among others, which have not been as popular as “House of Cards”.
  3. Hulu Plus has a better selection of current TV shows than Amazon Prime and Netfilx, and carries some TV channel series that the other two do not. Hulu is the best way to watch shows from NBC, FOX and Comedy Central.  You gain access to full seasons of shows instead of the last four of five episodes that cable “On Demand” offers.
  4. Giving up cable means losing ESPN and our favorite U.S. infotainment news channels but much of their content can be found online or at your local gym. If you are hankering for the latest news, the BBC at https://www.BBC.com for example has a lot of news you can stream for free if you want to read about the real things taking place in our world (other than Donald Trump and the endless coverage of the U.S. presidential election).  Aljazeera America at http://america.aljazeera.com has a ton of relevant news that you can stream and read about world events.  It was the best news channel I witnessed for real news while serving in Kuwait during the Iraq war and the only one we watched for real news.  Then there is also http://www.npr.org where you can listen and watch a commentary and news on variety of topics anytime you want.
Unlike cable, the free and paid services above can be streamed to many devices such as your tablets, smartphones, TVs, etc. Also, unlike cable, except for “On Demand” these online options can be paused, played in the background, made full screen, fast forwarded and rewound quickly to anywhere in the broadcast and much more. Having streaming YouTube to watch “Professor Messer” to study for my class work in my Jacuzzi tub to study is quite the boon.

Friday, April 8, 2016

Apple's response to my commentary on privacy in support of their FBI stance!

I wrote Apple about my support of their position that backdoor algorithms to encryption technology are a bad idea and I expected nothing in return. I have also sent out many resumes and filled out many applications in the years since I fought Lymphoma cancer caused by radiation exposure during the Iraq war that received no response. Apple actually went so far as to send me back this letter.

________________________________________________________

March 27, 2016

Thanks for contacting us. We welcome your feedback on Privacy and Security.  Apple strives to provide a positive experience to our customers. You can submit feedback here:

http://www.apple.feedback

Please be assured that Apple values the time and consideration that you invested in your email.  Thank you for taking the time to share your thoughts with us..

Sincerely,

Apple Customer Care

________________________________________________________

No wonder Apple is one of the leading U.S. companies. Kudos to Apple!

Wednesday, March 9, 2016

The answer to why the FBI does not ask the NSA to break into the terrorist phone and demands Apple do it!

Adding to the debate, we have to question why the FBI does not ask the NSA to break into the terrorist’s phone. The NSA has massive and very expensive supercomputers that can crack codes/encryption very quickly.  No form of encryption technology can stand up against the infinite computing power of the NSA. However, if, and that is a BIG IF, information on the phone led to a criminal court case, the NSA may have to describe the method it used to crack the phone, which they want to avoid at all costs.

Therefore, in February 2016, the FBI asked for $38 million in funding to counter the growing use of encryption technology employed.  This is a drop in the bucket compared to the estimated $52.6 billion dollar BLACK BUDGET. The U.S. BLACK BUDGET spans over a dozen agencies that make up the National Intelligence Program.  The top five agencies, by spending:


 The above information was taken from http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-srv/special/national/black-budget.

Looking at the chart above, the requested FBI budget for 2016 is $8.48 billion.  Some of the breakdown of that budget is as follows as taken from https://www.fbi.gov/news/testimony/fbi-budget-request-for-fiscal-year-2016, “The request includes a total of $8.4 billion for salaries and expenses, supporting 35,037 permanent positions (13,074 special agents, 3,083 intelligence analysts, and 18,880 professional staff), and $68.9 million for construction. Two program enhancements totaling $20 million are proposed: $10.3 million to increase cyber investigative capabilities, and $9.7 million to leverage Intelligence Community Information Technology Enterprise (IC ITE) components and services within the FBI.

The FY 2016 request includes the cancellation of $120 million from Criminal Justice Information Services (CJIS) excess surcharge balances and $91.4 million in non-recurred spending ($50.4 million in the salaries and expenses account and $41 million in the construction account).


Overall, the FY 2016 request represents a net increase of $47 million over the FY 2015 enacted levels, representing an increase of $88 million for salaries and expenses and a decrease of $41 million for construction.


As you can see from the above numbers most of the FBI budget supports their 35,037 employees. Comparing their $8.4 billion dollar budget to the $52.6 billion dollar black budget leaves the FBI very limited resources to spend on cyber security and breaking encryption. Something U.S. taxpayers have to ask themselves is, with such a well-funded cyber security and encryption breaking BLACK BUDGET, why does the FBI need such underfunded and redundant cyber security expenditures?

Therefore, how does the FBI get around their lack of ability to break encryption when they are blocked from using the unlimited BLACK BUDGET cyber security/encryption breaking capabilities? They do so by asking U.S. companies to put in easy backdoors nullifying the encryption techniques being employed to protect data. Once those backdoors are leaked, the Russians, Chinese, criminals, and back hat hackers now have an easy path to get at the data stored on those devices. This results in a HUGE loss of intellectual property in the United States to other countries.

Ironically, the FBI states that preventing intellectual property theft is a priority for them. However, these engineered backdoors may have enabled the biggest theft of trade secrets and infringements on products that impact consumers’ data, health and safety, such as counterfeit aircraft, car, and electronic parts in U.S. history. The FBI even admits that much of theft takes place overseas, and costs U.S. businesses billions of dollars a year as well as robs the nation of jobs and lost tax revenues. In Fiscal Year 2011, federal agencies only made 24,792 intellectual property rights seizures valued at $178.3 million. (See:  https://www.fbi.gov/about-us/investigate/white_collar/ipr/ipr, https://www.dhs.gov/topic/intellectual-property-rights)

Compare that trivial number to the 2013 report documented by the Huffington Post, which concluded that hacking costs the overall U.S. economy as much as 100 billion each year. That means we are countering 0.1783% of all intellectual property being stolen in the U.S. and to counter that threat, “U.S. companies are spending millions of dollars securing their networks, buying insurance and repairing their reputations after getting hacked.” (See:  http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2013/07/25/hackers-jobs_n_3652893.html)

How much of those numbers that can be traced back to encryption backdoors is unknown. For example, a stolen cell phone of a corporate executive or integral employee may have given up a treasure trove of information such as corporate accounts and passwords that hackers exploited later. Another example is perhaps the personal information on a hacked phone gave a criminal the ability to blackmail a knowledgeable corporate employee. The possibilities for the invasion and exploitation of easy FBI backdoors to iPhones are endless and this is a rabbit hole that should not be opened when there are U.S. BLACK BUDGET options that can achieve the same results.

Friday, February 26, 2016

In interview after interview everyone is missing the point behind Apple's battle with the FBI

This is the next blog entry in what will be an ongoing series as the battle between Apple and the FBI continues. This is one of THE most important legal battles in the history of the United States and THE purpose behind my book and most of my writing.

Folk's, I'm growing very tired of listening to radio and TV interviews that are all missing the point behind Apple's battle with the FBI. It is certainly about privacy but that is just the Tip of the Iceberg. Here is something for you to think about as NPR and others only put lipstick on the FBI pig!

About 10 to 12 years ago the government passed legislation to ensure that customers private, personal, and financial information, which is collected and manipulated by corporations, is to remain as secure as possible under penalty of prosecution.

Apple, in direct response to that concept, created an operating system that explicitly complies with the heart and soul of that mandate. As a result, Apple, itself, cannot even access that data on the person's device, a phone.

The government has now mandated that Apple violate that principle by writing code against that security which, after it is written, has no reasonable guarantee that such code would remain under the control of responsible users. The case in point is Edward Snowden, who the NSA thought would not violate the secrecy of the NSAs violation of data gathering without due process.

If the government (NSA) cannot protect its own dirty secrets (The Atom bomb, the Hydrogen bomb and so on), how will the government (FBI) protect the code they had the courts mandate to be written? How is Apple going to protect itself from prosecution when that release ultimately happens? Catch 22.

Even if Apple is not ever prosecuted does every United States citizen want to surrender all the data they store on their smartphones to the Russian mafia or the Chinese syndicates? This last sentence is something you won't hear any radio or TV interview mention!

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Apple fights an unprecedented battle! The U.S. government threatens what is left of the security and privacy of every U.S. Citizen!

Folks, since I wrote my book "The Internet is Infected!" we just seem to continue down the path to the total destruction of privacy for any U.S. citizen. Apple computer has launched a battle that the average U.S. citizen does not understand. (See: https://www.apple.com/customer-letter, http://thatcybersecurityguy.com/TIIICEChapter5.html) I'm hoping this blog entry will aid them in their battle with the Ministry for State Security (Stasi) U.S. government. (See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stasi)  (See: https://finance.yahoo.com/news/apple-vs-fbi-where-does-everyone-stand-163132527.html)

Taken from my book:

On July 11, 2014 in an interview with the Guardian, William Binney, a 30-year veteran of the intelligence community stated the following as fact; "At least 80% of all audio calls, not just metadata, are recorded and stored in the US… At least 80% of fiber-optic cables globally go via the US… This is no accident and allows the US to view all communication coming in... The NSA lies about what it stores… The ultimate goal of the NSA is total population control…" William Binney resigned from the NSA on October 31, 2001 because he was disgusted by Washington's move towards mass surveillance. The difference between Binney and Snowden was his high rank and that he did not take any documents as proof with him. From that time forward, he has been an outspoken critic of the NSA's unnecessary mass surveillance stating, "it's better than anything that the KGB, the Stasi, or the Gestapo and SS ever had!" He likes to mock the NSA by pointing out such things as how the NSA's mass gathering of data did not stop 9/11, missed Russia's intervention in Ukraine, the Islamic States' take-over of Iraq and has stopped zero terror attacks inside the US. Because of his vocal criticism he has been persecuted with investigations, had his home raided by the FBI who also took his computer and backup disks, had his security clearance revoked, which forced him to close a profitable $300,000 a year business and spend $7,000 on legal fees.  In his Guardian interview he laid down the gauntlet by saying, "There are no other views for the judges to consider. There have been at least 15-20 trillion constitutional violations for US domestic audiences and you can double that globally.  I call people who are covering up NSA crimes traitors." Binney expressed publically on CBN in July 2014 that the ultimate goal of the NSA is total population control. He also stated that Internal Revenue Service has "direct access" to the NSA's domestic spying data and was likely using it to target the tea party.  (See:  http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/jul/11/the-ultimate-goal-of-the-nsa-is-total-population-control, http://www.cbn.com/cbnnews/us/2014/August/Whistleblower-NSA-Goal-Is-Total-Population-Control)

As you now know, any email sent via any major email provider is screened automatically by intelligence services. Most people in the U.S. I have met say "so what, let them screen me because I have nothing to hide". This is because they and their ancestors never experienced the Soviet Stasi excesses during Communist rule. A common joke in Germany is "Why, despite all the shortages, is toilet paper in eastern Germany two-ply? Because they have to send a copy of everything they do to Russia." German courts are blocking the implementation of the EU Data Retention Directive, and they have ruled against Google's data gathering practices. As German Chancellor Angela Merkel stated "These two values – freedom and security – to a certain extent are and always have been at odds with one another. The proper balance needs to be struck again and again by means of the law. The end does not justify the means. Not everything that is technically possible should also be permissible." Western citizens in the U.S. do not understand how violations in their privacy can be exploited or how providing this information can come back to haunt them.

Gpg4win is Windows encryption software supported by the German Federal Office for Information Security (BSI). Because of the expressed German outrage over the NSA scandal, we can have a high degree of certainty that there are no U.S. backdoors built into this open source software. However, the source code is freely available, and you can rest assured it has been studied and perhaps broken by some very smart NSA folks. Gpg4win is actually a suite of encryption utilities bundled together that will be installed on your Windows computer. From the Gpg4win website those utilities are:
  • GnuPG - The core; this is the actual encryption tool.
  • Kleopatra - A certificate manager for OpenPGP and X.509 (S/MIME) and common crypto dialogs.  (See:  http://docs.kde.org/stable/en/kdepim/kleopatra/kleopatra.pdf)
  • GPA - An alternative certificate manager for OpenPGP and X.509 (S/MIME).
  • GpGOL - A plugin for Microsoft Outlook 2003/2007/2010/2013 (email encryption).
  • GpgEX - A plugin for Microsoft Explorer (file encryption).
  • Claws Mail - A complete email application with crypto support.
  • Gpg4win Compendium - The documentation (for beginner and advanced users), available in English and German.
The Gpg4win Compendium documentation is an excellent reference for learning about their software, how email message encryption works and much more. Their encryption software is designed to integrate well with Microsoft Outlook using their GpGOL plugin. However, using other email clients is a bit more difficult, but easily mastered. Since many of you are probably not using Outlook, I decided to only present a simple solution using the Gpg4win Claws Mail client. Rather than repeat what is in Gpg4win's documentation, the following example is intended as a quick step-by-step guide to get you started. I chose to present only OpenPGP message encryption in Gpg4win because by using this method you can practice generating key pairs exchanging your public key with Gpg4win's automated practice server. I have found that many people are intimidated by this technology, and having a tool where you can practice without repercussions should make things fun and easy. For example, posting a public key on a public key server or saying something incorrect on technical forum can invite some hostile criticism and attacks from knowledgeable computer professionals. I highly encourage you to read Gpg4win manual at http://www.gpg4win.org/doc/en/gpg4win-compendium.html, which details everything you need to know about encrypting messages, files, setting up certificates and much more. If you are a SBO you will need to study and pay close attention to the certificates portions of the manual. Setting up, registering and using certificates is a somewhat complex topic that I chose not to cover in my book. It is important to an SBO, but has little or no significance to an HCU. (See: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gpg4win) Buy my books for the rest...

You have it within your power to turn back these draconian invasions into our privacy. Support Apple in their fight for your privacy. Encryption is simply a method of encoding information that makes it more difficult for someone to view if our files or messages are intercepted. Mankind has been employing, developing and using encryption for thousands of years, and it is time we all do so safely when using our infected Internet. Encryption seems like a lost art to the common person, but it need not be. This skill is mandatory to develop to be able to survive in today’s digital world. If you want to keep the data that you exchange with your business partners or family secure, it is essential that you master this skill.