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<p style="font-size:xx-small;">The Samsung Galaxy peeks out of a pair of pants.FoxNews.com / Jeremy
A. KaplanThe battle to maintain some semblance of privacy in our online
lives is a classic one-step-forward, two-steps-back situation. Just when
you start to feel you have a grasp of things, we get
hit with new revelations about government spying.The latest? How U.S. and
British intelligent agencies are working to take advantage of the extraordinary
information that online social-media sites are collecting on us.So that's
the latest two steps back. The latest one step forward deserves more
notice.Both Apple and Android have recently introduced new ways for advertisers
to deliver targeted ads to us. This sounds like bad news, but
the good part is that, given widespread consumer outrage on the issues,
both companies have shown some spine and designed the new protocols both
to keep the data anonymized and to make it easier for us
to opt out from tracking.Let's be honest. In the realities of the
world we live in, we have to accept not just advertising but
creative advertising. Most of the Internet is free; the price we pay
for it is ads of one sort or another. But changing technology
and the advantage companies have over us when it comes to
understanding the implications of technology has created a situation that
is both excessive and harmful.And, further, we should note that the ad-tracking
data the companies collect should be anonymous. They just know a certain
user
owed to carry a small clutch
bag or purse that's no bigger than 6.5 by 4.5 inches and
a clear plastic bag that's about as big as a freezer storage
bag, per the NFL's bag policy. TSA will not have a place
to store larger bags, and a person will not be allowed to
clear security and get on the train with one.The checkpoints started Friday
and will be random until Sunday, when they turn mandatory for all
people taking the train to MetLife Stadium. Friday agents were swabbing
women's' bags to check for explosives.Fans will also have to go through
metal detectors and regular security at the stadium as well.Officials estimate
between 12,000 and 15,000 passengers will ride the train between the Secaucus
station and the stadium. Ten double-decker trains capable of carrying up
to 1,350 passengers each will run to the stadium.Durkin said agents will
be looking "for anything that could negatively affect the safety of New
Jersey Transit passengers."Meanwhile, the Defense Department said Friday
it would be playing a major role in Sundays game with F-16
fighters patroling a temporary flight restriction zone over the stadium,
in addition to ground troops, a flyover and other contributions, Politico
reported.Pentagon spokesman Army Col. Steve Warren told the website that
while military flyovers have been cut back over the past year because
of budget constraints, the Army will send helicopters to help open the
Super Bowl."This is the Super Bowl," Warre
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