Author: mxm_india

  • Security Is Not Privacy, Part 1: The Mobile Target

    In technical fields like information technology, definitions are fundamental. They are the building blocks for constructing useful applications and systems. Yet, despite this, it’s easy to assume a term’s definition and wield it confidently before discovering its true meaning. The two closely related cases that stand out to me are “security” and “privacy.”

    I say this with full awareness that, in my many writings on information security, I never adequately distinguished these two concepts. It was only after observing enough conflation of these terms that I resolved to examine my own casual treatment of them.So, with the aim of solidifying my own understanding, let’s properly differentiate “information security” and “information privacy.”

    Security vs. Privacy: Definitions That Matter

    In the context of information technology, what exactly are security and privacy?

    • Security is the property of denying unauthorized parties from accessing or altering your data.
    • Privacy is the property of preventing the observation of your activities by any third parties to whom you do not expressly consent to observe those activities.

    As you can see, these principles are related, which is one reason why they’re commonly interchanged. This distinction becomes comprehensible with examples.

    Let’s start with an instance where security applies, but privacy does not.

    Spotify uses digital rights management (DRM) software to keep its media secure but not private. DRM is a whole topic of its own, but it essentially uses cryptography to enforce copyright. In Spotify’s case, it’s what constitutes streaming rather than just downloading: the song’s file is present on your device (at least temporarily) just as if you’d downloaded it, but Spotify’s DRM cryptography prevents you from opening the file without the Spotify application. The data on Spotify (audio files) are secure because only users of the application can stream audio, and streamed content can’t be retained, opened, or transmitted to non-users. However, Spotify’s data is not private because nearly anyone with an email address can be a user. Thus, in practice, the company cannot control who exactly can access its data.

    A more complex example of security without privacy is social media.

    When you sign up for a social media platform, you accept an end-user license agreement (EULA) authorizing the platform to share your data with its partners and affiliates. Your data stored with “authorized parties” on servers controlled by the platform and its affiliates would be considered secure, provided all these entities successfully defend your data against theft by unauthorized parties.

  • test

    The dog (Canis familiaris or Canis lupus familiaris) is a domesticated descendant of the gray wolf. Also called the domestic dog, it was selectively bred from a population of wolves during the Late Pleistocene by hunter-gatherers. The dog was the first species to be domesticated by humans, over 14,000 years ago and before the development of agriculture. Due to their long association with humans, dogs have gained the ability to thrive on a starch-rich diet that would be inadequate for other canids.

    Dogs have been bred for desired behaviors, sensory capabilities, and physical attributes. Dog breeds vary widely in shape, size, and color. They have the same number of bones (with the exception of the tail), powerful jaws that house around 42 teeth, and well-developed senses of smell, hearing, and sight. Compared to humans, dogs possess a superior sense of smell and hearing, but inferior visual acuity. Dogs perform many roles for humans, such as hunting, herding, pulling loads, protection, companionship, therapy, aiding disabled people, and assisting police and the military.

  • What it Was Like to E-Bike Across Morocco – From the High Atlas to the Sahara Desert!

    On an early winter morning, I geared up to pedal 64 km from Ifrane – Morocco’s only Alpine ski town – to Midelt, at the edge of the Sahara Desert. Despite wearing several layers, I could barely feel my fingers under my gloves. It was 4 degrees Celcius, and the wind numbed my cheeks. We cycled through a forest filled with giant cedar trees, and within a few kilometers, the landscape turned into large rolling meadows resembling the Mongolian Steppes, filled with thousands of grazing sheep and the occasional nomads tending them. Warmed by the winter sun, I slowly shed my layers. The arid landscape transformed again, and filled me with nostalgia for Ladakh. All around me rose the Middle Atlas mountains in multiple hues – dry, barren, stark and incredibly stunning.

    It was Day #8 of a two week cycling trip with Intrepid Travel, and I had to pinch myself again – I was really cycling in the Atlas Mountains, and experiencing the mindboggling natural beauty of Morocco on two wheels!
    My first trip with Intrepid Travel

    Morocco has been on my radar for quite a while. When my partner and I finally sat down to research our trip, we were gripped by the idea of slowly cycling through the country – like we’d done through Central Switzerland.

    Intrepid Travel’s 2 week Cycling Morocco trip sounded perfect, with an interesting mix of Morocco’s highlights and offbeat, community-supportive travel. We’d have local guides, luggage transfers and support vehicles; all we had to do was show up and pedal.

    The next thing I knew, I was packing layers to cope with the hot sun and cold weather in December in Morocco. We boarded a flight to Casablanca, then a train to Marrakech, met our local Berber guides and 11 fellow cyclists, and embarked on what was one of the most stunning cycling adventures of my travelling life!

  • More about me and my wife …

    Thanks for looking! I’m David Leiter, and this is my travel blog.

    I’m an American who’s been traveling the world full time for 9 years. Nowadays, my second home is Bali, Indonesia, where I met my wife Intan.

    I first fell in love with travel on a solo road trip across Iceland in 2016. My budget was small, so I slept in the back of a rental car for 1 month while I drove 7,000 kilometers around the country, filming all the scenic places in Iceland.

    One of my first videos racked up a few million views and was featured on international TV by BBC Travel. 

    Since then I’ve solo traveled to many developing countries, including almost every country in Asia, Central America, and the Middle East.

    I experienced the 7.0 Lombok earthquake in Indonesia in 2018, the bombings in Bangkok in 2019, and a fair share of scams, fights, sicknesses, car accidents, and other crazy things along the way.

    It hasn’t always been easy, but over the years I’ve been blessed with some amazing experiences, including:

    • • Hiking to Mount Everest Base Camp in the Himalayas,
    • • Climbing an erupting volcano in Guatemala,
    • • Trekking on glaciers in Patagonia and visiting the Iguazu Falls in Argentina,
    • • Seeing wild Komodo dragons and orangutans in Indonesia,
    • • Sleeping in treehouses in Bali and seeing blue fire in Java,
    • • Dining on tarantulas and scorpions in Cambodia,
    • • Riding a camel to the Great Pyramids of Giza in Egypt,
    • • Skydiving over paradise in Oahu Hawaii,
    • • And visiting some timeless world monuments like the Taj Mahal, Tikal, Bagan, Machu Picchu, Hagia Sophia, Angkor Wat, Petra, and Himeji Castle.

    I met my sweet wife and travel buddy Intan while I was traveling in Asia in 2017, and we got married two years later on a beach in Bali.

    She’s homegrown Balinese, and she’s a former English teacher and makeup artist. She also grew up riding a scooter and she’s tri-lingual (speaks 3 languages fluently). Her name means diamond.

    My wife has been an indispensable translator for me in remote parts of Indonesia where almost no one speaks English, like Banggai, Labengki, and the Banyak Islands.

    Intan is a people lover, and her favorite part about travel is trying new food (especially Asian food). She’s not into the hiking so much, but she still joins me on volcano hikes and other such adventures.

    We’ve been traveling the world full time as a couple for 7+ years now, and we welcomed our daughter Emma in 2025.

    We have some more big international trips planned soon. We hope you’ll tag along! Please stay tuned!

  • Nusa Penida Island In Bali: Travel Guide & How To Visit

    The beautiful, exotic Nusa Penida island lies just 25 kilometers from Bali, the most famous tourist destination in Indonesia.

    Nusa Penida is a much smaller island than Bali, but it has some of the most amazing scenery in the entire Bali province (which it’s part of).

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    I’ve visited Penida dozens of times over the years, but it never gets old. This island is definitely one of the most beautiful places to visit in Indonesia.

    The island can be visited on a day trip from Bali (same day return), but I think it’s better to stay and spend at least a few days sightseeing. There are so many good photo spots, hikes, and other things to do in Nusa Penida!
    This travel blog will explain what to do in Nusa Penida, how to get there, where to stay, best transport options and tour packages, and some of the top sights to see. I’ve also included a handy map of the island for planning your trip!

    Nusa Penida Day Tour Packages

    First of all, if you’re on a tight schedule or want to skip the extra steps involved in arranging your own trip to Nusa Penida, GetYourGuide has prearranged day trips to Penida, complete with hotel transfer, fast boat tickets, island tour, and same day return to Bali.

    These tours visit some of the top sights in Nusa Penida island, including Kelingking Beach, Broken Bay, and more. We’ve used GetYourGuide for lots of day tours and activities around the world, and they’re great! Highly recommended.

    Where Is Nusa Penida?

    Nusa Penida is a small island located southeast of Bali, Indonesia. The distance from Bali is about 25 kilometers (15 miles).

    Penida has two small neighboring islands sitting right next to it called Nusa Lembongan and Nusa Ceningan, and together these are known as the Nusa islands, but Nusa Penida has become the most famous of the three because of its scenic cliff views and stunning beaches.

    How To Get To Nusa Penida

    From Bali, the only way to reach Nusa Penida is by speedboat or ferry, with the speedboat journey taking about 45 minutes or so. There’s no airport in Nusa Penida, so the closest place to fly is the international airport in Bali (DPS).

  • How To Visit The Pyramids Of Giza & Sphinx In Egypt

    What kind of bucket list doesn’t include the Great Pyramids of Giza in Egypt? Believe it or not, the Giza pyramids are fairly easy to visit on a day trip from Cairo, the capital of Egypt.

    Built in 2560 BC, the Great Pyramid of Giza was the tallest man-made object in the world for 3,800 years. It’s the oldest of the Seven Wonders Of The Ancient World, and the only one still standing today.

    Visiting the Egypt pyramids is a pretty simple experience, and there’s not a whole lot to do there except gaze at the big piles of rock, but it’s still a profound and unique experience that every traveler should check off their list.

    Quick Facts (Main Pyramid)

    • Date: 2560 BC
    • Height: 150 meters (500 ft)
    • Base Length: 150 meters (500 ft)
    • Weight: 6 million tons
    • No. of Blocks: 2.3 million
    • Builders: 200,000+

      Best Day Tours To The Egypt Pyramids

      First of all, if you’re on a tight schedule and want to skip the extra steps involved in arranging your own trip to the pyramids, or if you’d rather travel in a tour group for safety or convenience, there are options for doing that.

      There are a number of companies that offer prearranged day tours to the Pyramids of Giza and the Sphinx for as low as $45 USD, complete with hotel transfer, optional camel ride, and same day return to Cairo.

  • 8 Best Things To Do In Oahu Hawaii (Fun, Couples, Free)

    1. Hike The Trails

    Oahu island has almost 300 documented hiking trails, featuring jagged green mountains, coastal views, jungles, and waterfalls.

    2. Visit The Pillboxes

    During World War II, the U.S. military built concrete bunkers all around the island of Oahu as lookout posts for spotting enemy activity.

    3. See The Waterfalls

    There are dozens of nice waterfalls on Oahu island, and they can usually be reached with a short, easy hike through the jungle.

    4. Climb The Stairway To Heaven

    This hike is so amazing it deserves a special mention. It’s also epic, scary, and slightly illegal. Still interested?

    The infamous ‘Stairway to Heaven’ takes you to the top of the Ko’olau mountains via 3,922 metal stairs of pure adrenaline and doom. At some points, the stairway is almost vertical, clinging to the side of the steep mountain.

    5. Climb A Volcano Crater

    Another famous hike in Oahu that deserves a special mention is the Koko Crater Trail! This one is an endurance test that takes you up 1,048 stairs on the steep slope of an extinct volcano crater.

  • Gemini gets more personal, proactive and powerful

    The Gemini app has seen incredible momentum recently—and today, we’re introducing new capabilities to help you do even more.
    Here’s what we announced at Google IO:

    • Gemini Live with camera and screen sharing, is now free on Android and iOS for everyone, so you can point your phone at anything and talk it through.
    • Imagen 4, our new image generation model, comes built in and is known for its image quality, better text rendering and speed.
    • Veo 3, our new, state-of-the-art video generation model, comes built in and is the first in the world to have native support for sound effects, background noises and dialogue between characters.
    • Deep Research and Canvas are getting their biggest updates yet, unlocking new ways to analyze information, create podcasts and vibe code websites and apps.
    • Gemini is coming to Chrome, so you can ask questions while browsing the web.
    • Students around the world can easily make interactive quizzes, and college students in the U.S., Brazil, Indonesia, Japan and the UK are eligible for a free school year of the Google AI Pro plan.
    • Google AI Ultra, a new premium plan, is for the pioneers who want the highest rate limits and early access to new features in the Gemini app.
    • 2.5 Flash has become our new default model, and it blends incredible quality with lightning fast response times.

    Get deeper insights: now add your own sources to Deep Research

    Starting today, you can get a complete, customized Deep Research report that combines public data with your own private PDFs and images. This means you’ll get a holistic understanding, cross-referencing your unique knowledge with broader trends, all in one place, saving you time and revealing connections you might have otherwise missed.

  • Do We Need to Reconsider Our Flying Guilt?

    While working on a research paper on climate adaptation in tourism, I had an eye-opening consultation with a Kerala-based social enterprise.

    Over a decade of working in local villages, they developed a strong community tourism model that embeds tourism into the existing agrarian routine of farmers, and allows travellers to authentically engage with the community. Since inception, their primary audience has been conscious travellers from Europe, seeking slow travel and meaningful experiences that bring economic and social prosperity to regions of Kerala off the typical tourist trail.

    Flying guilt – or flygskam – though, has had unintended consequences. The same conscious travellers, ridden by flying guilt in recent years, have repeatedly cancelled their trips to the region. Their decision to pursue lower footprint travel that doesn’t involve flying has directly impacted community tourism in these parts of Kerala, where tourism revenue beautifully supplemented increasingly unpredictable agricultural incomes.

    Is Flying Guilt Productive?

    When I first wrapped my head around my personal flying footprint, I thought this guilt will keep me in check – and it does. Instead of jumping on cheap airfares or impulse flight buying, I now think long and hard about the impact of every flight I take.

    Tourism is linked to vital wildlife conservation efforts

    Even though tourism has had adverse impacts on local ecologies around the world, wildlife conservation models around the world are often linked to tourism.

    In Uganda for instance, I was surprised to learn that Bwindi National Park is home to lucrative gold deposits, but the forests and mountain gorillas retain their habitat only because gorilla tourism yields more money. Gorilla permits cost a whopping 800$ per person!

    Some island nations depend entirely on tourism – and flying!

    The greatest pushback against the flying shame movement comes from Small Island Developing States (SIDS), which includes islands like the Maldives, Mauritius and Seychelles, whose economies are heavily reliant on tourism. The only way for travellers to reach them is by long distance flying.

    Sustainable aviation remains a distant dream

    The Airbus Summit I recently attended in France came as a reality check that we are FAR from achieving global sustainable aviation goals. SAF (sustainable aviation fuel) is projected to contribute only 4-5% of total jet fuel consumption by 2030, which will likely be offset by air travel growth. Electric and hydrogen powered planes – though promising – are still in their initial R&D phase, with much to be done to get the entire ecosystem technologically and financially ready for take off.

  • India’s mcap rises $1 trn since March; leads gains in top 10 equity markets

    India’s listed companies have added nearly $1 trillion in market capitalisation since early March 2025, taking the total to $5.33 trillion. This sharp increase comes on the back of a strong rally that followed a five-month correction between October 2024 and February 2025, Moneycontrol reported.

    In percentage terms, India’s market capitalisation (mcap) surged by over 21 per cent — the highest growth among the world’s top 10 equity markets. India now ranks as the fifth-largest equity market globally, trailing only the US, China, Japan, and Hong Kong.
    Germany recorded the second-largest gain during this period, with its mcap rising nearly 14 per cent. Canada followed with an 11 per cent jump, while Hong Kong’s mcap increased by more than 9 per cent. Japan and the UK also saw gains of around 8 per cent each.

    By contrast, the US, the world’s biggest equity market, reported a modest increase of around 2.4 per cent. China, the second-largest, recorded a 2.7 per cent rise. France and Taiwan reported gains of over 3.9 per cent and 3.2 per cent, respectively.

    Sensex and Nifty ride the rally
    India’s benchmark indices, the Sensex and Nifty, rose by 12.5 per cent and 13.5 per cent, respectively, during this period. Broader market indices performed even better: the BSE MidCap index climbed over 20.7 per cent, and the SmallCap index jumped by 26 per cent.

    RIL, Reliance, Reliance Industries
    7 top valued firms see ₹2.31 trn jump in valuation, Reliance biggest winner
    However, the rally has also led to stretched valuations, raising concerns among analysts. Many have started lowering their earnings forecasts, the report said.

    Earnings estimates reflect caution
    According to a recent note from JM Financial, the Nifty 50’s earnings per share (EPS) estimate for FY25 saw a minor upward revision of 0.3 per cent in April 2025. However, estimates for FY26 and FY27 were downgraded by 1.1 per cent and 1.0 per cent, respectively. The slight upgrade for FY25 EPS is due to muted analyst expectations for Nifty’s fourth-quarter FY25 profit after tax (PAT) heading into the results season, the news report said.

    The trend of downgrades continues, with the April 2025 cuts for FY26 and FY27 being sharper than those recorded in earlier months — 0.9/0.6 per cent in February and 0.2/0.6 per cent in March. This points to a cautious outlook on forward earnings. According to Bloomberg consensus estimates, the Nifty 50 companies are projected to grow earnings by 14 per cent year-on-year in FY26.

  • test post Donald Trump says he knew abut India’s military strikes against Pakistan, hopes it ends quickly

    test post Donald Trump says he knew abut India’s military strikes against Pakistan, hopes it ends quickly

    “We just heard about it as we were walking into the Oval Office. Just heard about it. I suppose people expected something like this, given the history. They have been in conflict for a long time, many decades, even centuries if you think about it. I hope it ends very quickly,” Trump said.

    The US State Department also addressed the situation but chose not to offer an immediate evaluation. In a statement to ANI, a spokesperson said, “We are aware of the reports, however, we have no assessment to offer at this time. This remains an evolving situation, and we are closely monitoring developments.”

    Meanwhile, Pakistan’s military confirmed that Indian missile strikes had targeted Muzaffarabad, Kotli, and the Ahmed East area of Bahawalpur. Director General of Inter-Services Public Relations, Lieutenant General Ahmed Sharif Chaudhry, said, “Some time ago, the cowardly enemy India launched air strikes on the Subhanullah

  • How To Visit The Taj Mahal In India

    The Taj Mahal of India always seemed like the coolest thing. Especially as a 90s kid growing up with Aladdin and Age of Empires.

    I never thought I’d see it in person someday. It really does feel like you’re stepping into a Disney movie or something!

    This wonder of the world is located in Agra, India, and it’s relatively easy to visit on a day trip from New Delhi or Jaipur as well.

    This travel guide will explain how to get to the Taj Mahal and what to expect, including the current entrance fees, where to stay, and everything else you need to know before you go!

    What Is The Taj Mahal? Who Built It?

    The Taj Mahal is a huge monument, palace, and tomb built in 1632 by emperor Shah Jahan for his favorite wife, Mumtaz Mahal. The couple is buried together inside the Taj Mahal.

    How To Get A Visa For India

    First of all, most nationalities will need a visa to visit India, which is given in the form of an electronic visa (eVisa) since November 2014.

    This is required (except for Bhutanese and Nepali citizens) if you want to visit India and see the Taj Mahal.

    Day Tours To The Taj Mahal

    If you’re on a tight schedule and want to skip the extra steps involved in arranging your own trip to the Taj Mahal, or if you’d rather travel with a tour guide for safety or convenience, there are options for doing that.