Opinion

THE LAST WORD

i NEED A MOBILE MECHANIC

There are over 2,200 cy­ber­at­tacks a day, com­puter se­cu­rity com­pany Nor­ton es­ti­mates, which means there is a cy­ber­at­tack some­where on the in­ter­net about every 40 sec­onds. With cy­ber­at­tacks on the rise, it’s only a mat­ter of time be­fore it hap­pens to you.

It was my turn last year, when my bank ac­count was hacked after my wife had bought an item on­line from, of all places, the TV3 web­site. I re­mem­ber my panic when she told me that over a thou­sand euros in pur­chases had been made, from video games to pay-per-view sports.

This is it, I re­mem­ber think­ing, star­va­tion had fi­nally caught up with us. I rang the bank won­der­ing if there would be any­thing left in our ac­count by the time some­one an­swered the phone.

“Oh, don’t worry about it. It hap­pens all the time,” was the re­sponse. Silly me! All we had to do was re­port it to the po­lice and then we could claim the money back. Sure enough, a few weeks later the money reap­peared in our bank ac­count.

Yet rather than using the ex­pe­ri­ence to dis­miss the fear of hack­ing as overblown, I pre­fer to see it as a warn­ing to get my data pri­vacy act to­gether. As you can see in our fea­ture on page 12, how our per­sonal data are used and abused is no triv­ial mat­ter.

The only prob­lem with man­ag­ing your on­line ac­tiv­ity and the de­vices you use to ac­cess the in­ter­net is that it’s all so over­whelm­ing. Do I need a VPN ser­vice? If so, which one? Which op­tions on my phone should I dis­able? Can I use Google or should I find an al­ter­na­tive? What am I to do with the 48 pass­words I no longer re­mem­ber? Do I re­ally have to read this 5,000-word con­tract be­fore I down­load that app I thought I’d try out?

I un­der­stand that the an­swers to all of these ques­tions are read­ily avail­able and that there is some great ad­vice out there, but I’m in my fifties now and I only have so much time left! Do I re­ally have to be­come an ex­pert in data pri­vacy just so I can use my smart­phone safely? What I don’t un­der­stand is why they don’t make it as easy to do the right thing on­line as they do to make the wrong choice. If I can hand over my life’s sav­ings with one in­ju­di­cious click, why can’t I pro­tect them just as eas­ily as I can pro­tect my car with a sin­gle press of a but­ton?

In fact, the whole car com­par­i­son is a valid one I think. In order to drive my car safely there is a se­ries of ac­tions that it is my re­spon­si­bil­ity to know about and man­age. I need to keep the tyres cor­rectly in­flated, make sure there’s wind­screen wiper fluid, I have to know how to change a bulb or check the oil and how to change a wheel if I have a punc­ture.

How­ever, I don’t need to know how to strip the en­gine down or swap out the ex­haust pipe. Some peo­ple do know how to do these things be­cause they take an in­ter­est in cars, and good luck to them. I’m not one of those peo­ple and that’s why I have a me­chanic who takes care of these more com­pli­cated op­er­a­tions.

Like my car, my smart­phone is com­plex and re­quires main­te­nance to make sure it works well and safely. So why haven’t I got some­one who does that? I can in­stall an up­date or clear a cache, but for more com­plex op­er­a­tions that re­quire spe­cial­ist knowl­edge, why haven’t I got an ex­pert who for a rea­son­able price will en­sure my pri­vacy is pro­tected and my de­vice safe to use with­out me hav­ing to put in hours of re­search as if I was doing a de­gree? I don’t know about you, but I need a mo­bile me­chanic!

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