Magento’s New Privacy Policy

Most people tend to pass on reading through long boring legal documents whenever they’re installing new software, filling out forms, and especially hearing about changes to their privacy policies. It may not always be the most pressing information to stay on top of, but Magento recently updated their privacy policy and it’s good to know what kinds of changes may affect you…

  • Cookies – There have been changes to how Magento tracks users on its site with cookies and other tracking technologies.
  • Collecting Personal Information – Updates have been made both to how Magento describes your personal information and an expansion of what they collect (mostly through calls and text messages)
  • Sharing Personal Information – Magento will not share personal information with any third parties, but note this doesn’t preclude them from giving information to parent company eBay.
  • Privacy Disputes – Magento now works with privacy dispute resolution provider TRUSTe

The changes are immediate for new users of Magento and will apply to all customers starting on April 6th, 2013.

Stay informed!

The Commative Team

GoDaddy Taken Down By Anonymous?

Big news today as GoDaddy was taken down by the hacker group Anonymous for over four hours. In what will go down as one of the largest Internet outages to date, GoDaddy.com was unavailable as were thousands of sites hosted on GoDaddy servers and millions more who simply had their domains registered with the company.

Starting around 1pm EST, sites associated with GoDaddy were unreachable with browsers timing out as they couldn’t resolve site domain names. In the last hour the problems appear to have been temporarily resolved after GoDaddy moved their own DNS to competitor VeriSign. There still has been no formal statement from GoDaddy on what caused the outage or exactly what led to the problems being so widespread.

In a statement released during the attack, Anonymous announced that their actions were in response to GoDaddy’s position on the controversial SOPA bill that was proposed in the United States Congress earlier this year.

Commative.com was affected by the outage but is now back up, hopefully not to be interrupted again. Stay up to date on the latest news by following us on Twitter @Commative.

The Commative Team

Keep Your Personal Information Safe (Especially Around Apple)

You always hear that you have to be really careful about what information you have online.  After recent revelations surrounding Apple’s customer service security protocols (and most probably other companies’ as well) though you’re going to want to be really really really careful.

Wired journalist Mat Honan was targeted by hackers simply because he had a three character Twitter account. He was reasonably cautious with his data and passwords, but some clever social engineering bypassed the need for stolen passwords or bruteforce hacking. With a few simple phone calls to Apple and Amazon and access to publicly available information they were able to get passwords reset, use their newfound access to get into other accounts, and eventually remotely take control of Mat’s iPhone, iPad, .me account, and Twitter account.

It’s scary to think about how vulnerable your information can be (Mat lost all the pictures he had of his daughter’s first year), but there are a few things to remember.

  • Back things up! Even if you’re on the cloud its critical you back up your most important data to disconnected storage with regularity.
  • Don’t use the same passwords! If someone finds one, they’ll have access to your entire online persona.
  • Don’t be obvious! If every email address is yourname@somewhere.com then things can be guessed a little too easily.
  • 2 Factor Authentication!Google supports it and others are starting to as well. It may be slightly more annoying to deal with but it’s dramatically more secure.

Be safe!

The Commative Team