CONTACT CAROLINE
facebook
rss
tumblr
twitter
goodreads
youtube

  • Home
  • Write Away Blog
  • Books
    • Books
    • Trompe l’Oeil
    • Heart Land
    • Gothic Spring
    • Ballet Noir
    • Book Excerpts
  • Video Interviews
  • Press
    • News
    • Print Interviews
    • Plays
    • Ballet Noir in the Press
    • Trompe l’Oeil In The Press
    • Gothic Spring In The Press
    • Heart Land Reviews
  • Contact
  • About
  • Resources
    • Writer Resources
    • Favorite Blogs
    • Favorite Artists



Life After The Lingerie Department

Apr 13, 2020
by Caroline Miller
coronavirus, Donald Trump, free apps that steal information, getting hacked hacked, Sears Roebuck, social security number, the dark web
2 Comments

Courtesy of pexels.com

Twice each day while I was quarantined because a neighbor was awaiting coronavirus test results, a nurse came to my apartment to take my temperature. One morning, I forgot to put in my hearing aids, so I didn’t respond to her knock until she pounded on the door like a lumberjack. Who knew someone so tiny could make so much noise?

She’d been stranded in the hall because my attention had been fixed upon my computer screen.  Somewhere in that black hole, I’d hoped to find inspiration for a blog. But as I say, eventually, I scurried to answer the nurse’s call and she performed her act of mercy in less than a minute. As she turned to do the same for the tenant in the next apartment, cradling her bruised fist as she did, I had my Eureka moment. Being deaf was a blessing. Each time I removed my hearing aids, I could disconnect from the world and cosset myself in the illusion I had control over my privacy. 

Doing the same in the virtual world, of course, isn’t so easy. True, I’ve deliberately avoided Donald Trump’s contaminated information about the coronavirus in his news briefings. But, I don’t wish to disconnect from my email. Most of it is junk, I admit.  But not always. Today, for example, I received a communication from my publisher.  The message expressed regret as well as an apology. Hackers, it seems, had breached a firewall and stolen my personal data.

Receiving this news months earlier, I’d have blanched with alarmed. Alas, I am no longer a shy maiden.  Equifax allowed my privacy to be breached a year ago. By now, I can only hope the numerous thieves who sell my secrets on the dark web use appropriate tags: Caroline Miller, author of Heart Land, Gothic Spring, Trompe l’Oeil and Ballet Noir, SS# 666-13-89. (If you recognize these numbers, you belong on the dark side.)

I deleted the publisher’s apology once I’d read it  “Sorry” doesn’t cut it anymore.  I am old, deaf and locked up in a senior facility. All the same, I can credit myself with having guarded my social security number since the age of 16, when I acquired it to work weekends in the lingerie department of Sears Roebuck.  Yet, my publisher, within a scant two years, had fed it to the wolves.

Blaming the company isn’t reasonable, I suppose. Some of these thieves turn out to be legitimate companies. Free apps available on smartphones and tablets come with a price: the loss of privacy.  Grinder, Tinder, OkCupid, Happen, Cue, MyDays, Perfect365, Qibla Finder, My Talking Tom 2 and Wave Keyboard are the 10 most popular and their raison d’etre is to collect private information to sell to third-party advertisers.  (“Smart Apps Are Violating Your Privacy,” by David Rosen, Public Citizen News, March/April 202, pg. 12.)  Desktop users have some control over the spread of their information through their browser settings and extensions—which makes me feel smug for being old-fashioned.  

What these companies are doing is probably illegal in Europe and might constitute deceptive business practices in the United States. But their owners have deep pockets to defend themselves. So why bother to complain? Still, never having been found guilty of a crime doesn’t speak to innocence. Those engaged in the snooping business have the instinct of thieves and live lives devoid of conscience. 

 

Social Share
2 Comments
  1. Susan April 13, 2020 at 7:40 pm Reply
    Lovely essay but it is slightly in error: you are a vibrant, 60-looking, witty woman.
    • Caroline Miller April 14, 2020 at 8:31 am Reply
      My twenty-three years gone with the stroke of a sentence. Thank you. It must be the saffron I'm drinking.

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

*
*

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Contact Caroline at

carolinemiller11@yahoo.com

Portland, Oregon author Caroline Miller had distinguished careers as an educator, union president, elected official and artist/advocate.

Her play, Woman on the Scarlet Beast, was performed at the Post5 Theatre, Portland, OR, January/February 2015

Caroline published a serialized novelette, Marie Eau-Claire, on the website, The Colored Lens.  She also published the story Gustav Pavel,  a parable about ordinary lives, choice and alternate potential, on the website Fixional.co.

Caroline has published four novels

  • Ballet Noir
  • Trompe l’Oeil
  • Gothic Spring
  • Heart Land

Subscribe to Caroline’s Blog


 

Archives

Categories

YouTube-logo-inline2 To access and subscribe to my videos on YouTube, Click Here and click the Subscribe button.

Banner art “The Receptive” by Charlie White of Charlie White Studio

Web Admin: ThinPATH Systems, Inc
support@tp-sys.com

Subscribe to Caroline's Blog


 

Contact Caroline at

carolinemiller11@yahoo.com

Sitemap | Privacy Notice

AUDIO & VIDEO VAULT

View archives of Caroline’s audio and videos interviews.


Copyright © Books by Caroline Miller