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23 votes
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US senator warns governments are spying on Apple and Google users via push notifications
38 votes -
Harvard gutted initial team examining Facebook files following $500 million donation from Chan Zuckerberg Initiative, Whistleblower Aid client reveals
42 votes -
Windowless skyscrapers. These often misunderstood structures play mysterious roles in our urban landscape. In this video we explore the purposes and intriguing stories of these architectural anomalies
12 votes -
Accused of violating kids' privacy, Meta sues US Federal Trade Commission, hoping to block ban on monetizing kids’ data
40 votes -
Email provider recommendations? (Privacy-focused, paid-for)
I have self-hosted my email for many years, but am finally encountering some straws that may be breaking the camel's back. A few email providers are now rejecting my server's mail, Microsoft in...
I have self-hosted my email for many years, but am finally encountering some straws that may be breaking the camel's back. A few email providers are now rejecting my server's mail, Microsoft in particular (
@
hotmail,@
outlook). (In case you're wondering, I already set up SPF, DKIM, DMARC, etc. and none of that is the issue.) Self-hosting was fine, and the technical admin work was never really an issue. I'm just tired of the external factors that are beyond my control, like belonging to an IP range that is scored badly by some random blocklist company.So, I'm now shopping for a good email provider. Privacy and security are important to me, and I am more than willing to pay for email, so all the usual "free" email providers are out of the question. (Update) Also, client access (IMAP, SMTP) is a must.
For now, I am eyeing
Proton is looking to be my choice among those two, as I like the replyable email aliases feature. 16 times the storage doesn't hurt, either.
Any other recommendations in the same vein as these two, and in the same price range?
35 votes -
You should connect to Tor via a VPN, actually
21 votes -
US National Transportation Safety Board calls on automakers to install speed-limiting tech in new vehicles
32 votes -
We and our 756 partners process personal data to
29 votes -
Privacy is priceless, but Signal is expensive
74 votes -
Norway's privacy battle with Meta is just getting started – regulator says it's investigating the company's new ad-free subscription services
28 votes -
Privacy win: EU Parliament decides that your private messages must not be scanned
34 votes -
Private UK health data donated for medical research shared with insurance companies
30 votes -
US court rules automakers can record and intercept owner text messages (potentially misleading, see comments)
64 votes -
No more phone number swaps: Signal messaging app now testing usernames
46 votes -
AI cameras took over one small American town. Now they're everywhere
30 votes -
On GoGuardian and invasion of student privacy
24 votes -
Trial testimony - Google considered and rejected creating a form of search that doesn't track users history from website to website
14 votes -
Why the “privacy” wars rage on
12 votes -
On the inadequacy and obsolescence of US laws protecting student privacy - threatening intellectual freedom to explore ideas
6 votes -
Why only 1% of the Snowden Archive will ever be published
25 votes -
Fraud, abuse, fingerprinting, privacy, and openness – Why my bank is fingerprinting me and why that's fine
4 votes -
YouTube anti-adblock detection is illegal in the EU
77 votes -
Mozilla’s Annual Consumer Creep-O-Meter
52 votes -
Is there a reason the iPad pro "scans" your house every minute?
My wife has an ipad pro, and we have a baby monitor. So I was watching the baby monitor and noticed that her ipad was also in view of the camera. What I also noticed is that her ipad seems to...
My wife has an ipad pro, and we have a baby monitor. So I was watching the baby monitor and noticed that her ipad was also in view of the camera. What I also noticed is that her ipad seems to flash an infrared light every minute or so.
After some googling I think this is the lidar scanner, although I'm not 100% sure.
Anyway, does anyone know why her ipad is doing this? It feels pretty creepy that a device is scanning your house all the time. Normally you don't even notice, it's only when you view the iPad pro from a camera that also shows infrared.
Maybe I'm just a little paranoid, but it feels like a privacy violation.
10 votes -
Cops are suing a teen for invasion of privacy after allegedly false arrest goes viral
15 votes -
Prosecutors in Finland have charged a hacker accused of the theft of tens of thousands of records from psychotherapy patients
9 votes -
Meta (Facebook / Instagram) to move to a "Pay for your Rights" approach
33 votes -
You can't control your data in the cloud
19 votes -
ICE, CBP, Secret Service all illegally used US smartphone location data
30 votes -
Consumer Reports releases "Permission Slip" app for requesting data removal
31 votes -
We know who you are
20 votes -
Philips Hue will force users to upload their data to Hue cloud
72 votes -
Reddit is removing ability to opt out of ad personalization based on your activity on the platform
93 votes -
‘Who benefits?’ Inside the EU’s fight over scanning for child sex content
23 votes -
Norway asks EU regulator European Data Protection Board to fine Facebook owner Meta over privacy breach
9 votes -
Signal’s Meredith Whittaker: AI is fundamentally ‘a surveillance technology’
24 votes -
Inside ShadowDragon, the tool that lets ICE monitor pregnancy tracking sites and Fortnite players
23 votes -
TikTok fined record £300m for putting children’s privacy at risk
28 votes -
Google gets its way, bakes a user-tracking ad platform directly into Chrome
138 votes -
With Focus you can search the web you want
21 votes -
It’s official: Cars are the worst product category we have ever reviewed for privacy
130 votes -
Apple threatens to pull FaceTime and iMessage in the UK over proposed surveillance law changes
71 votes -
Meta lost a legal battle Wednesday to halt a Norwegian ban on its advertising practices that came with hefty daily fines
22 votes -
As employers expand artificial intelligence in hiring, few states in the USA have rules
12 votes -
We lost the war - Come to terms with the imminent loss of privacy and civil rights without going lethargic
16 votes -
X to collect biometric and employment data
39 votes -
Apple’s decision to kill its CSAM photo-scanning tool sparks fresh controversy
24 votes -
Judge rules against banks' request to seal documents in upcoming New York Donald Trump case. Records will be public with very specific exceptions for privacy.
24 votes -
YouTube's privacy settings now block you from seeing suggested content
I've always been a bit of a privacy enthousiast. Have had everything blocked that Google and by extension YouTube wants to scrape off you. This means I've also blocked my view history. Recently...
I've always been a bit of a privacy enthousiast. Have had everything blocked that Google and by extension YouTube wants to scrape off you. This means I've also blocked my view history.
Recently YouTube started giving out a warning on the homepage that you have blocked your view history, that you can change it in your privacy settings and that it helps them serve you better content. What it also means is that your homepage is just one big popup to guilt trip you into sharing your data. The homepage won't show any suggested content anymore.
While it is in their interest to do so and since they are a company wanting to make money it is understandable. Nevertheless it seems harsh from going to see content that you might like to only seeing a big warning sign right now.
What are you experiences with this?
34 votes