Katie & Scott & Simon & Cecily.

Tag: security

Day 253: password

So here’s a story of me losing to technology today.

My work password needed to be changed.  Every month or two months or some other arbitrary amount of time, our work servers force us to change our password.  Some of you probably experience this at your work as well.

So, this morning, with 1 day left until my password expired, I went ahead and changed my password.

At some point in the late afternoon, I went into a meeting and locked my computer, as I often do when I’m going to be away from my desk for an extended period of time.

When I returned, every password I attempted to put in to unlock my computer failed.

Here’s what must have happened.  I must have made a typo when changing my password.  And then, miraculously, I must have somehow made the same typo when entering my new password into the second field.

Either that, or I’m incredibly stupid and can’t actually remember what I changed my password to.

Still, I left work today (a rather productive day, overall) feeling sad and defeated by a simple string of letters and numbers.

Day 164: iphone self destruct

There is an option on the iPhone, under password settings, which you can set to have your phone automatically delete all your data if the password is entered incorrectly 10 times in a row.

This option frightens me.  It frightens me enough that no amount of security/privacy paranoia can convince me to turn it on, but it also frightens me that it even exists.

What if it accidentally gets turned on?  A mere 40 button pushes later, all my data will be gone.  Forever.

Well, until I resync with my computer, at which point I’ll get to restore my latest backup.

But still.  It’s scary.  Just in principle, if not in actual practice.  And being frightening in principle is much worse.

Day 40: the mom’s ok & airport security, or lack thereof

Katie and I are back in San Francisco, back home.  My mom, too, is back home at her apartment in New Jersey.  She was discharged from the hospital this morning.  She came home, showered, and ate some porridge.  All in all, she’s doing very well, considering that a section of her intestine was removed from her body less than a week ago.

Here are a few pictures to back up my encouraging words.  This first one was taken when we visited her yesterday, and the one on the right is from this morning, just before we took her home:

IMG_0106 IMG_0112

We woke up at around 9 AM or so New York time and our flight arrived into SFO at around 9 PM or so San Francisco time, so it’s been a rather long day.  I managed to finish Watchmen on the plane.  I also won a contest with my Pokemon.  He bedazzled the judge Dexter with his acting skills.

I’m not an airport security expert either, but I am one of those (many?) people that think the entire routine when entering the gate area at US airports is mainly theatrics.  The shoes, the liquids – it all seems to be there to reinforce the notion that we’re being secured against the types of attacks that have been identified in the past.  I suppose it does prevent me from using large amounts of liquids or my shoes as potential weapons, but that seems like fixing a potentially leaky dam by plugging two specific small holes.

Not only that, these procedures does more to punish the innocent than the guilty.  Security lines now take longer to process for all travelers because of the time it takes for everyone to take off and put on their shoes; additionally, the liquids policy makes it much more inconvenient for any legitimate traveler to bring their usual makeup or personal care items.

Lastly, in the big picture view of things, it’s hard to imagine that these policies will stop determined terrorists from achieving their objectives; that’s what frightens me most.  Before September 11, it was somewhat inconceivable that less than a dozen men could commandeer multiple planes with their objective being to crash the planes into large structures.  This wasn’t because plane hijacking was unheard of; it was because previous hijackings hadn’t been kamikaze missions.

Terrorists aren’t necessarily smarter than our security teams are, but they have the advantage because they can afford to react.  Our government is in a tough spot because they need to be able to outthink and predict events and actions that haven’t yet happened.  The security policies that I see at our airports don’t convince me.  Perhaps there’s more than meets the eye, but it feels more like theater than actual protection to me.

© 2024 It's Dai Time

Theme by Anders NorenUp ↑