Try encryption, if no password allowed

Question: How do I password-protect only some of the files on my Windows 8 computer? Also, how can I password-protect data on a thumb drive?

Answer: You can't password-protect individual files in Windows 8. But you can opt for a deeper level of file protection called encryption.

Encryption software will scramble files so that they can only be unscrambled with the same software on the same computer by the same user (assuming each user of the computer has a different login identity). You can also encrypt an entire portable thumb or flash drive.

Windows 8 will even do the encryption for you through a function called "Encrypting File System" that works in connection with Windows Explorer. For a video, see http://tinyurl.com/p38d43k. For a written explanation with screen shots, see http://tinyurl.com/ottda5u.

Q: When I try to rip an audio CD into my Windows 7 music library, I get the message, "Windows Media Player cannot rip one or more tracks from the CD." What's wrong?

A: The problem could lie within the Windows Media Player settings, or there could be file corruption in the database that stores the music. For detailed instructions on how to deal with either problem, see Microsoft's explanation at http://tinyurl.com/mvm9b3a.

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Try encryption, if no password allowed

Wiliest Ways to Keep the NSA at Bay

"Whatever the level of cryptography you're using, the NSA can probably break into your home network, install keyloggers and grab whatever they want -- passwords, private PGP keys, screenshots, etc.," said Cyril Soler, a developer on the RetroShare project. "This is always easier than breaking the encryption." Their ability to do that is probably facilitated by backdoors.

The death of online privacy had already been proclaimed long before Edward Snowden landed in the international spotlight, but if it wasn't confirmed back then, Snowden's NSA revelations surely must have extinguished the last vestiges of hope in even the most die-hard optimists.

"We're in a predicament," Phil Zimmermann, Pretty Good Privacy creator and cofounder and president of Silent Circle, told LinuxInsider. "Everything we do on the Internet is being captured in a vast database -- it's a kind of Panopticon.

"We have to do something about this," added Zimmermann, an Internet Hall of Fame inductee. "We have to push back in policy space as well as use countermeasures like encryption."

Public policy changes rarely happen quickly, of course. In the meantime, those countermeasures are looking more and more like users' best bet.

"I'd recommend making phone calls with Silent Phone," Zimmermann suggested, and "for email, PGP, GnuPG or something like it."

As for other online activities, "there's a lot of things you do on the Internet that leak information," he added. "They're capturing your Web browsing."

SSL and TLS are both protocols Zimmermann recommended using.

In addition, the Tor Web browser is "a good idea," he said. "I would recommend using Tor for visiting any website you would prefer to not have recorded."

On the road, if you're in a place where there may be a lot of interception, Tor or a VPN can help protect privacy, though not all VPNs are equally secure, noted Zimmermann.

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Wiliest Ways to Keep the NSA at Bay

Julian Assange: A Ghost Even to Himself?

The novelist and essayist Andrew O'Hagan spent the better part of a year working as Julian Assange's ghostwriter, before Assange's inattention and ambivalence about writing a book at all sabotaged the project. O'Hagan has now written a long memoir of the experience which is the most intimate and trustworthy description of Assange to yet appear. Some supporters of WikiLeaks argue that all of the attention paid to Assange's peculiar character is a distraction from the substance of his work, but the more up-close accounts of Assange have been published, O'Hagan's now chief among them, the more inextricable from his personality his work comes to seem. O'Hagan's essay, in the current issue of the London Review of Books, is titled "Ghosting," and that is the dominant image the novelist chooses: Of the impossibility of writing on behalf of a man who is spectral himself, who for all his fame and conviction has little sense of who he is, who sees himself only as a "a ghost in the machine, walking through the corridors of power and switching off the lights." What that imagethe ghost in the corridorcaptures perfectly is the idea Assange presented of himself, the hacker stealthy and empowered, the agent of disruption. But this image seems less satisfying the deeper you get into the history of WikiLeaks it seems like the propaganda version of Assange rather than the real one. OHagan suggests the truth may be a bit simplerthat Assange grasped so eagerly for a persona because he didnt have a clue who he was. Not a ghost in the machine, but something more elusive and spectral still: A ghost even to himself.

The months that O'Hagan spent with Assange were rich in scenery: The Australian, world-famous but under house arrest, was cooped up with a few acolytes in a rambling British manor house, his girlfriend dispatched to check the bushes for assassins. The general shape of Assange's characterromantic, uncultured, childish, narcissistichas long been established. O'Hagan confirms the general picture, though in his hands Assange's weirdness is even more intense. "I made lunch every day and he'd eat it, often with his hands, and then lick the plate," O'Hagan writes.

But the book project dissolves, over the course of O'Hagan's storyAssange rants about the publishers and lawyers who are out to get him, claims he has extensively marked up O'Hagan's draft but then will not produce the edit, sabotages interview sessions and then fixes on the conviction that instead of the autobiography he had contracted to produce he will deliver a manifesto, a description of his ideas. (The publishers predictably nixed this.) When the Assange tries to cut descriptions of his own life on the grounds that they will make him look "weak," O'Hagan comes to suspect that Assange, having been paid to assemble the story of his own life, has no story to tell.

"He dressed his objections in rhetoric and principles, but the reality was much sadder, and much more alarming for him," O'Hagan writes. "He didnt know who to be."

From the outset, Assange himself has been the central author of the Assange mythof the story in which the Australian is so completely an outsider that he seems less a character in a novel than a figure in a philosophical hypothetical, that the depths of his alienation from society make him destined to tell outsized truths. (The revelation at the end of The Fifth Estate, Paul Greengrass's based-in-fact biopic, is that Assange dyes his own hair white, perhaps in order to make himself seem stranger and more alien.) Here is how Assange described his childhood to the journalist Raffi Khatchadourian in 2010: I had my own horse. I built my own raft. I went fishing. I was going down mine shafts and tunnels. Assange told Khatchadourian that he and his mother had been tracked through his teens by a cult with moles in the government. In the excerpts that have surfaced of the autobiographical novel Assange once wrote (he calls the Assange character "Mendax," which is the hacker nom-de-guerre Assange used in real life) the Australian styles himself almost a video-game figure, an avatar: Mendax dreamed of police raids all the time. He dreamed of footsteps crunching on the driveway gravel, of shadows in the pre-dawn darkness, of a gun-toting police squad bursting through his backdoor at 5 am.

There are now a fairly large number of people who were once close to Assange and who continue to believe in the WikiLeaks project, but have fallen out with the Australian personally because of the sheer difficulty of dealing with him. To O'Hagan, add the celebrity journalist Jemima Khan, the Icelandic politician Brigitta Jonsdottir, the ex-WikiLeakers Daniel Domscheit-Berg and James Ball, and many other writers and thinkers. Among this group, the common lament is that Assange's personality doomed his causethat if he had simply been more capable of listening to other people, less certain that his allies were plotting against him, able to comprehend that young Swedish women did not necessarily want to have sex with him, then perhaps he would not be locked up in a Swedish embassy and WikiLeaks would be an enduring force for truth and transparency in global politics. There is a regret, as O'Hagan puts it, over "how far all this had taken us from the work WikiLeaks had started out doing."

That's one way of looking at it. Another is that the work WikiLeaks had started out doing would never have happened if not for Assange's own self-aggrandizing character. I mean this in two ways. First, one of the most unusual features of the Manning and Snowden episodes has beengiven the comparatively low security clearances each man enjoyed, and the obviously shocking material they uncoveredthat no one preceded them, that there weren't a hundred Snowdens and Mannings first, that details of the murderous conduct of American troops and the NSA's overreach took so long to be exposed. Second, had Assange not been goading the press from the sidelines, suggesting that his scoops were of a profound historical importance, it is not at all clear that the public response would have been as outraged as it was. (Consider, for instance, the New York Times first day coverage of the Afghan war logs, in which news of the major war crimes the logs contained is barely detectable.) These three figures Assange, Manning and Snowdenhave been widely derided for the detectable traces of alienation, narcissism, and strangeness in their personalities. But given the context, it seems possible that their alienation from other people is part of what compelled them to see the excesses of the state more clearly, and to broadcast their evidence more loudlythat their alienation was a feature, not a bug.

None of which does much to illuminate the nature of Assange's character, of what is behind this grasping construction of a two-dimensional persona. Perhaps the Australian suffered from a great sentimental wound, OHagan hypothesizes, like Orson Welless Citizen Kane. But thats a guess, and OHagan doesnt seem to have much certainty about it.

But I do think that we have underestimated the tragedy of Assange a little bit, as the reports of his self-involvement and obsessiveness and endless capacity for mistaking the big picture for the small have mounted. To see Assange as O'Hagan leaves him"like a cornered animal in the embassy," fixated on the undulations of his public reputation and fame, declaring himself to be the third-greatest hacker on earthis to feel a twinge of complicity, as one does with Chelsea Manning, as one does with the now-disgraced UN weapons inspector Scott Ritter. It isn't simply, as O'Hagan suggests, that the Australian's character is a cardboard construction, erected to fill a void, and that it wasn't up to the task of fame. It is that in some ways the rest of us needed someone willing to be exactly as two-dimensional as Assange wasthat we benefited from what broke him.

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Julian Assange: A Ghost Even to Himself?

Julian Assange to speak at SXSW

By Monica Ayala-Talavera Published: Friday, February 28, 2014, 3:00 pm

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange makes a statement to media gathered outside the High Court in London, Monday, Dec. 5, 2011. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

AUSTIN (KXAN) WikiLeaks founder and publisher Julian Assange will join SXSW Interactive 2014 via satellite video for a live conversation with The Barbarian Groups Benjamin Palmer on Saturday, March 8 at 11 a.m.

Assange, who rarely agrees to interviews, will talk about the spread of surveillance, advantages and abuses of the digital age and the future of democracy. This is one of more than 800 daytime programming sessions at the 2014 SXSW Interactive Festival.

In 2006, Assange gained notoriety when he established WikiLeaks, a platform which publishes government documents in an effort to confront corruption and publish the truth. Since its creation, WikiLeaks has published several million documents. Benjamin Palmer is co-founder of The Barbarian Group, an agency that since 2001 has specialized in digital branding for businesses.

You can access the http://schedule.sxsw.com/.

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Julian Assange to speak at SXSW

Businesses told to lockdown Bitcoin wallets against malware threat

CSO - Businesses considering accepting Bitcoins or other forms of cryptocurrency should be prepared to battle a rising number of malware aimed at emptying digital wallets.

That's the takeaway from a new study by SecureWorks, computer maker Dell's security unit. Researchers found that the number of malware targeted at stealing cryptocurrency from Windows PCs increased along with the rise in value of Bitcoin since the beginning of 2013.

As of January of this year, SecureWorks had identified on the Internet 100 unique families of malware capable of stealing wallet files or digital currency from users' exchange accounts. The increase in the number of cryptocurrency-stealing malware made it "one of the fastest-growing categories of malware," the study said.

While Bitcoin is not the only type of cryptocurrency, it is the most popular and the most valuable. The price has ranged from a high of roughly $1,150 in early December to a low of $420 Feb. 25. Bitcoin's price on Thursday was about $565. Other digital currencies include Namecoin, Litecoin, Dogecoin, PPCoin and Mastercoin.

The recent shutdown of Mt. Gox, which once had the largest market share of all digital currency exchanges, highlights the risk of cryptocurrency traded over the Internet. The Bitcoin exchange closed this month after cybercriminals stole $400 million. The heist is under investigation by U.S. federal authorities.

The rising popularity of digital currency has led to its adoption by retailers. Overstock.com became the first major online retailer to accept Bitcoins, and industry observers expect others to follow. The site SpendBitcoins lists many places on the web where people can spend their digital currency.

To protect the digital wallets used in conducting transactions, SecureWorks researchers recommend the use of a "split wallet," which has a portion of the file on the computer connected to the Internet and the rest on a system with no network connection.

The file kept on the Internet-enabled system would let the business track its running balance and perform transactions with customers. On the offline system is the private key for authorizing a transaction before it is transmitted.

Electrum is an example of a split wallet done through software. Examples of hardware-based products include Hardware Wallet and Trezor, which plans to release its product soon.

By using the proper security, businesses can significantly reduce the risk of accepting digital currency, Pat Litke, security researcher for Dell SecureWorks' Counter Threat Unit, said.

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Businesses told to lockdown Bitcoin wallets against malware threat

Friday Poll: Should Bitcoin be banned?

A senator calls for a US ban on Bitcoin, calling the currency "disruptive." Would you like to see a cryptocurrency crackdown, or are you on the Bitcoin bandwagon?

It's been a strange couple weeks in the realm of Bitcoin, the cryptocurrency that defies government regulation. The first US Bitcoin ATMs went into service, popular exchange Mt. Gox seized up, and Joe Manchin, a Democratic senator representing West Virginia, called for a US ban on Bitcoin.

In a letter sent to the Treasury Department and other federal regulators, the senator characterized Bitcoin as "highly unstable and disruptive to our economy." He calls for a complete ban in the US. The letter is more about drawing attention to Manchin's view of the issue, rather than anything that will result in regulatory action.

The recent incident with Mt. Gox has brought up questions about the safety and reliability of Bitcoin, but it's far from a knife in the heart of the cryptocurrency. It does have a famously fluctuating value. CNET's Crave writers have lost a little money on Bitcoin recently. I sent $20 into a Bitcoin kiosk, and it's now worth just over $16. Crave's Eric Mack lost about $2 in the Mt. Gox failure. Instability aside, I'm not rushing to spend my small Bitcoin stash, but I'm also not sinking any more money into it.

Not everyone is a Bitcoin fan, but not everyone is calling for a ban like Manchin. Does his idea make sense to you, or are you against banning Bitcoin? Vote in our poll and share your Bitcoin experience in the comments.

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Friday Poll: Should Bitcoin be banned?

Introducing Songcoin: New Cryptocurrency Built For Music Industry Hopes To Cash In On Bitcoin Craze

Well now the recording industry has its own cryptocurrency called Songcoin. Pimovi, a media and entertainment company, partnered with one of the architects of Namecoin and they plan to release Songcoin next week for use within the music business.

Pimovis chief technology officer, Kasian Franks, said in an interview with Evolver.fm (which was republished by Billboard) that Songcoin will be used to lower fees on transactions and international wires within the industry. To differentiate Songcoin from other cryptocurrencies, Pimovi said it will offer plenty of discounts that cater to musicians and fans. For example, Pimovi wants to work with ticket vendors to give fans that use Songcoin and cheaper rate.

As the stewards of this thing, with a healthy amount of experience with the music industry, we can gear this towards the music industry, Franks said.

To get the ball rolling, Pimovi will give them away for free initially and build a music recommendation system to help people discover new music. It will then add digital tip jars for each artist and will eventually gain value.

Thats Franks hope, anyway. The problem is that much of the value associated with Bitcoin is the complex mining process behind creating them. Bitcoin miners invest a lot of time and money to create a block of bitcoins that they can then spend as they please, giving bitcoins their initial value.

It also remains to be seen if the recording industry, typically slow to adapt to new technologies, will even be amenable to the concept of a cryptocurrency.

Franks is basing his strategy on Dogecoin, which was started as an Internet joke, and seems confident that it will work because Songcoin was started with a specific purpose in mind.

Franks also said that Songcoin users will be able to convert Songcoin into dollars by using Coinbase. However, Coinbase only trades in Bitcoin and remains unclear why it would be interested in Songcoin when it doesnt even work with Litecoin, a fairly established and valuable cryptocurrency.

Of course, its entirely possible that Songcoin will take off and be a success, but the interview shows several fundamental misunderstandings about cryptocurrencies and how they work. For example, Franks refers to the anonymous creator of Bitcoin, Satoshi Nakamoto, as this Japanese guy who they cant really find right now for some reason.

Maybe Pimovi will succeed in its goal to create an entire industry around Songcoin that includes products, partnerships and consulting services, but it seems more like an attempt to get rich quick from a serious misunderstanding of the cryptocurrency phenomenon.

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Introducing Songcoin: New Cryptocurrency Built For Music Industry Hopes To Cash In On Bitcoin Craze

‘This Week’ Transcript: WikiLeaks’ Julian Assange

A rush transcript of "This Week with George Stephanopoulos" airing on Sunday morning, October 13, 2013 on ABC News is below.

STEPHANOPOULOS: Good morning. Welcome to This Week.

Courting disaster.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

REP. JOHN BOEHNER, (R) OHIO: I don't want to put anything on the table. I don't want to take anything off the table.

(END VIDEO CLIP)

STEPHANOPOULOS: With the default deadline just four days away (inaudible) Washington stuck and the American economy your money hangs in the balance. It's up to the Senate to strike a dramatic last minute deal. Will House Republicans rally or revolt? And if we go over the cliff, what happens next.

This morning, all the breaking details about the high stakes negotiations from congress to the White House.

Then, NSA leaker Edward Snowden resurfaces and Hollywood takes on Julian Assange.

(BEGIN VIDEO CLIP)

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'This Week' Transcript: WikiLeaks' Julian Assange