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The Naked Truth: Cloud Ethics and Personal Responsibility

Page history last edited by Glenn Jason T. Nasser 8 years, 4 months ago

Title of the Essay, Author, and Date

The Naked Truth: Cloud Ethics and Personal Responsibility by Nikki Williams (October 16, 2014)

 

Title of the Reflection

P ersonal Principles

 

First Impression

A n essay about the cloud and how we should be responsible for what we post or what we share to the cloud

 

Quote

I am mindful that any and all of the sites that have encrypted my credit card information may be hacked at any time, so I keep a close watch on my card balances and understand fully the consequences of the gamble I am taking.

 

Reflection paper

 

The iCloud connects you and your Apple devices in amazing ways. It makes sure you always have the latest versions of your important information—like documents, photos, notes, and contacts—on whatever device you’re using. It lets you easily share photos, calendars, locations, and more with friends and family. It even helps you find your device if you lose it. To get started, just set up iCloud on your iPhone, iPad, iPod touch, or Mac, or get iCloud web-only accessright on iCloud.com. Then you can use iCloud.com from your computer’s web browser.

 

Nowadays, many private and public figure are the victims of scandals or nude photos. Like what happened to Jennifer Lawrence all the times she retrieved her account is still hack and Photoshop to a nude photo. The question is, how come the icloud security is easily hack their system? Or it’s truly the responsibility of the owner? The answer are both, to take a responsible of this incident. First, the icloud must tightly the security features especially their customers are celebrities nor the private figure. In personal responsibility, it is up to the owner or the person involved how he/she take a photo if it is a wholesome image or liberated style. Either your photo is not daring still the hacker it would like to spam your photo, if he/she seen a something naughty.

 

So, the internet world all of us must show some respect to others or might be think before you post or share photo into the social media, you would like it or not.

 

5 Things That I've learned

 

  1. Apple CEO Tim Cook responded by revealing that Apple will beef up its iCloud security measures by adding optional two-factor authentication for iCloud accounts.
  2. A new organization backed by Google and Dropbox, Simply Secure, also promised to work hard to develop technology that will tighten up security measures across platforms and devices.
  3. One Forbes writer feels that thinking ahead to probable outcomes is impractical and equates asking adults to preserve their privacy by not taking nude selfies to the right wing Christian practice of counseling abstinence.
  4. Computer security measures shouldn’t be considered completely trustworthy.
  5. The fact remains that every security system has a weak point.

 

5 Integrative Questions

  1. Why what was the reason Apple users who choose this option will have a passcode sent by SMS to their devices after they enter their username and password?
  2. Why spokesperson for Jennifer Lawrence stated; “This is a flagrant violation of privacy?
  3.  What should smartphone makers do about nude selfies? Should they encourage us all to point our phones away from our unclothed bodies or should they instead decide that naked selfies are inevitable, and add features to their products that reduce the chance that these photos could get hacked?”
  4. Where abstaining from taking and storing risqué photos is not a practical way to keep people from potential harm and that prophylaxis is the appropriate cure?
  5. Why what was the reason One article classified people who want to see nude selfie takers claim responsibility as “victim-shamers”?

 

 

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