Website review: Who is snooping on my email?
Someone discovered this in Activism
•9 reviews since Dec 23, 2005
activism, privacy
•computerbytesman.com/privacy/emailsnooping.ht...
People who like this website

- method
Los Angeles

- tranquil43
San Diego

- Dementropy
Tuxon

- DaveMon
Colorado

- andymushu
Colorado

- AaronJi
Vashon

- KevMoo
Seattle

- Francdoggydog
Denver

- Kayaks
Vancouver

- Lazy-N-Tierd
Dallas
StumbleUpon is the best way to discover great web sites, videos, photos, blogs and more - based on your interests.
Everything is submitted and rated by the community. Discover, share and review the best of the web!
Reviews of this website

hasdrubanipal rated 12 months ago- Great news for the paranoid: just send yourself a few hundred thousand messages and you can easily find out if anyone is snooping on you.

nocturnalist rated 27 months ago- Seriously this is totally awesome. snoop the snooper, find out if you're paranoid or if you're right.

Losgrinn rated 28 months ago- From the page: "With all of the controversy about the news that the NSA has been monitoring, since 9/11, telephone calls and email messages of Americans, some folks might now be wondering if they are being snooped on. Here's a quick and easy method to see if one's email messages are being read by someone else."

saar rated 30 months ago- From the page: "The steps are: 1. Set up a Hotmail account. 2. Set up a second email account with a non-U.S. provider. (eg. Rediffmail.com) 3. Send messages between the two accounts which might be interesting to the NSA. 4. In each message, include a unique URL to a Web server that you have access to its server logs. This URL should only be known by you and not linked to from any other Web page. The text of the message should encourage an NSA monitor to visit the URL. 5. If the server log file ever shows this URL being accessed, then you know that you are being snooped on. The IP address of the access can also provide clues about who is doing the snooping. The trick is to make the link enticing enough for someone or something to want to click on it."

PopeNorton rated 30 months ago- From the page: "The trick is to make the link enticing enough for someone or something to want to click on it. As part of a large-scale research project, I would suggest sending out a few hundred thousand messages using various tricks to find one that might work." They got a word for that...Spam! As for governments snooping through your mail? They been doing that for ages! Utah Phillips has a funny little story he uses in his stage shows. He says he'd be out on the road doing his folk music gigs, singing songs and telling stories about The Industrial Workers of the World, anarchists, socialists, communists,etc...and gardening. Utah loved to tend to his garden. And he'd tell the audience that he knew that the gov't was reading his mail. So he'd send a letter home saying "By God, don't let the feds dig in the back yard, that's where all the guns are buried." And sure enough, when he got home, the entire back yard was full of holes. And Utah would chuckle, saying "Just in time for planting season".

angelclare rated 30 months ago- I found this link via stumbler csdk. If you want to know for certain if big brother is spying on your e-mail, this is how.

csdk rated 31 months ago- From the page: " 1. Set up a Hotmail account. 2. Set up a second email account with a non-U.S. provider. (eg. Rediffmail.com) 3. Send messages between the two accounts which might be interesting to the NSA. 4. In each message, include a unique URL to a Web server that you have access to its server logs. This URL should only be known by you and not linked to from any other Web page. The text of the message should encourage an NSA monitor to visit the URL. 5. If the server log file ever shows this URL being accessed, then you know that you are being snooped on. The IP address of the access can also provide clues about who is doing the snooping. The trick is to make the link enticing enough for someone or something to want to click on it."

camelot2302 rated 31 months ago- Frankly I've got better things to do with my time than get entangled with the NSA.