Categories
Photography

Silent Sunday Aug 25 2024

Categories
How-Tos

NPD breach and how to protect yourself

Note: this writing has been updated with new information August 25, related to the credit bureaus; August 29, 2024 relating to Login.gov, August 31 related to credit bureau fraud alerts.

After being notified by Have I been Pwned that my social security number and other information has been stolen yet again, it was time to up my game when it comes to securing who I am. Especially when using two online tools that checked my data in the NPD breach and discovering that the records contained my Social Security number, phone numbers, Date of Birth (not always accurate), and address for every address I have lived at for over 30 years.

All information that can be used to not only get a credit card or bank account, but that can be used to create an account at the major credit bureaus. Enough information to steal who I am.

My SSN had been stolen previously from an ATT hack, which I’ve still never forgiven ATT for. That came with a year of credit monitoring, which I am using. I also have alerts at Credit Karma, my banks, my credit cards, and so on so that any activity triggers a text or email.

I also set up two-factor authentication at every online site I access. My geeky sites, such as this weblog, my domain manager, and my server company, as well as my ID.Me login all require the use of an authenticator app. My bank, credit cards, insurance companies, and so on use token notification: either sending a code to may email, or sending a text message to my phone.

In the last week, I took the extra step I should have taken a while back, and froze my credit reports at the four credit bureaus.

Yes, four.

I’m covering all these steps I’ve taken the last few days so that folks can check their own security procedures.

Categories
Photography

Silent Sunday August 18 2024

Categories
Government Savannah Weather

Project 2025 and Tropical Cyclone Debby

(source links following)

Just when I started going through the Department of Homeland Security section of Project 2025, tropical cyclone Debby hit Georgia. And it hit Georgia hard.

Areas along the coast and even inland that have never flooded before, flooded. Storm water systems failed to handle the amount of rain that fell, storm water lagoons overflowed, and sewer lift stations were overrun resulting in raw sewage spills in several areas. Roadways were flooded, or complete destroyed when earthen dams failed. Entire neighborhoods in Chatham, Bryan, Liberty, Effingham, Bulloch, and other counties watched the water creep up; sometimes it stopped, sometimes it didn’t.

Currently, FEMA is working with GEMA (Georgia Emergency Management Agency), assessing the damage and determining whether a Major Disaster declaration is warranted for the state and impacted counties. Some folk thinks this means calling our Congressional reps or the governor or other persons of power and telling them to declare a disaster so we can get on with our lives.

It doesn’t work that way.

Categories
Savannah Weather

Debby does the neighborhood

This morning, at the crack of dawn, I braved the heat and humidity to walk down to see the flooding on Chief of Love Road.

A police car blocked one lane into the road, but folks could get around it to reach the non-flooded homes. However, cars were parked over the sidewalks in order to protect them from the water. They could be from the cut off Teal Lake area.

The entrance to Teal Lake, isolated because of the flood.
I suspect the subdivision being cut off flooding is going to put a crimp into home sales

Or from the Fords Pointe townhouses, still accessible, but with flooded streets.

Flooded town home complex streets.
Fords Pointe with flooded streets
Town houses from the back, with flood waters very close
Back of the town houses, with very close flood waters

Our subdivision isn’t at risk because we’re at an elevation above the area. According to FEMA, we have zero chance of flooding. But after seeing how much of the area is flooded based on 8 inches of rain, and knowing that thanks to climate change, future hurricanes will drop more rain, I’m no longer so confident about our safety.

Thankfully, the Ogeechee river is starting to go down. Slowly. But homes have been flooded, so normalcy is a ways into the future.

And peak hurricane season for us isn’t until September.