Passwords and Heartbleed

Yahoo! sent an email yesterday indicating that because of the Heartbleed vulnerability, my account was being locked and I needed to go through a process to change my password. I am a heavy Flickr user so this required a response. I was initially skeptical because of the built in form, but I then tried to connect directly to Flickr and found that I was indeed blocked and the same form appeared. Changing passwords is a hassle. I explore so many services using so many devices that any adjustment even for one account requires considerable effort. I am guessing I will have to now update a dozen devices (phone, ipads, desktops, laptops) in order to access my Flickr account. I know, I know – I should be a model of sound security practices. I also should not complain for what my son refers to as a “first world problem” and appreciate I have this number of devices. Still …

I do use multiple passwords limiting the damage I would experience should one of my passwords become known. My Google resources are protected by two-factor authentication (I receive a passcode on my phone when I attempt to connect from a different machine, a different location and some other unknown situations I have yet to figure out). I also understand there are ways to use a one password system that controls multiple passwords for individual accounts, but these systems scare me and I am afraid to place all of my accounts under the control of a single company.

Anyway, there is a way to check for the Heartbleed vulnerability – https://lastpass.com/heartbleed/ (lastpass is a provider one of the one password solutions I describe above). I tried the technique on a server I use and discovered the following: Screen Shot 2014-04-14 at 12.20.45 PM

Time to make some more changes.

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New online threat

This has been all over the Internet this evening – the heartbleed bug.  Here is an description from TechCrunch.

For more information.

Mashable suggestions for the sites that require password changes.

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Years of living dangerously

Showtime has a new series focused on climate change – Years of Living Dangerously. Despite the position of the anti-science nay-sayers, this is an important issues. Like misrepresenting the Affordable Care Act as Obamacare, climate change has sometimes been called global warming allowing simplistic talking heads to mislead uninformed listeners whenever a blizzard sweeps through. The series web site (see link) offers teachers suggestions for classroom use.

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Web literacy?

There seem to be a growing number of literacies. I guess it depends on how specifically you think the label should be applied. This site developed by Mozilla offers tutorials intended to develop your understanding of web site development. Clearly, anyone can now generate content available online without knowing much about html, css, etc. However, perhaps if you are an advocate of the Program or be Programmed perspective, you could use these resources to develop a very thorough understanding of what goes on to get content to you. I do not intend to make light of this knowledge – there is something quite satisfying in creating from scratch.

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Billionaires, education, and the rest of us

This Education Dive article identifies the 10 billionaires putting the most money into education and some comments on where it is going. What you will likely conclude is that most mix goals you support and others you oppose. Such is the challenge of gift horses.

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A little help here

I generate few presentations in Google docs so I was slow to discover this feature (I knew it existed for word processing). I use Explain Everything to develop presentations to cover when I am going to be out of town. AERA begins the end of this week. Moving content from Google into Explain Everything on the iPad is one of the options for input. When I opened up a PowerPoint in Google Docs, I found that it offered me suggestions for additional information. While I am not certain I would base lecture content on Wikipedia (no reflection on the ‘pedia), it was interesting to view how Google interpreted my content and the resources that were recommended.

googpresoinfo

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