I have a junk LinkedIn account with 4 connections and no profile details. Under "People You May Know" it shows my wife and I. Why?
@stevewerby same IP makes sense, since they might assume 'coworker' and recommend
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@attritionorg For coworker, I agree, but could get from org name. If it's by IP, then it opens up some interesting attacks on shared Wi-Fi. -
@stevewerby@attritionorg they use location attributes as well -
@stevewerby@attritionorg I've had two previous landlords recommended, which were different networks/IPs used, but same physical location -
@Digital4rensics@attritionorg Wow. Different IP, but same location is a lot more advanced.
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@attritionorg Access Wi-Fi from coffee shop, airport, hotel lobby and then as people access LinkedIn learn their names. Privacy fail. -
@stevewerby@attritionorg Worked on RFP response for Wifi infra at large mall. You would not believe what they wanted to be able to do -
@ken5m1th@attritionorg Can you share? I'll guess tracking device location to share data with stores and injecting offers. -
@stevewerby@attritionorg And ability to watch users browser activity, restrict sites they could goto, pull any ID info they could abt user -
@ken5m1th@attritionorg That's what I call free Wi-Fi with strings attached! -
@stevewerby@attritionorg They were requesting things that aren't even possible. No one who had any clue was consulted when RFP was created -
@ken5m1th@attritionorg I actually live it when requirements aren't possible. Makes for good stories and thinking outside of the box. -
@stevewerby@attritionorg My first thought is usually - where in the hell did they ever get the idea that was even possible?
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