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10 votes
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Millions are on the move in China, and Big Data is watching
9 votes -
Goodbye Big Five: Kashmir Hill tried to block each of Amazon, Facebook, Google, Microsoft, and Apple from her life for a week. To end the experiment, she tried to block all five at once.
19 votes -
What I learned from the hacker who spied on me
7 votes -
The "Do Not Track" Setting Doesn't Stop You from Being Tracked
20 votes -
The Age of Surveillance Capitalism by Shoshana Zuboff review – we are the pawns
7 votes -
Inrupt releases React SDK for Solid
6 votes -
Google is also abusing Apple's Developer Enterprise Program to distribute a data-collection app
24 votes -
I cut Google out of my life. It screwed up everything
38 votes -
Major iPhone FaceTime bug lets you hear the audio of the person you are calling before they pick up
25 votes -
Facebook moves to block ad transparency tools- including ours
8 votes -
Thieves of experience: How Google and Facebook corrupted capitalism
6 votes -
The CNIL has imposed a penalty of fifty million euros against Google for breaches of the GDPR
12 votes -
Netflix, YouTube, Amazon and Apple accused of GDPR breach
27 votes -
Twitter's Android app disabled "protect my tweets" when other settings were changed, potentially making private tweets public
12 votes -
Privacy and Politics
I was thinking about the intersection of internet privacy and politics. You could even say I was having a bit of a mini-crisis. I like to think of myself as being pretty liberal, but I wondering...
I was thinking about the intersection of internet privacy and politics. You could even say I was having a bit of a mini-crisis. I like to think of myself as being pretty liberal, but I wondering how that fits into privacy. I was a little upset when I learned that Obama called Edward Snowden unpatriotic. I was kind of thinking that what he did was patriotic. Wasn't the NSA monitoring US citizens without warrants. That's morally wrong right? I think I would be pretty fine with the government monitoring someone if they had a warrant given to them by a non-secret court. I'm wondering if anyone here can give me some insight on this or if anyone else feels/has felt this way.
4 votes -
DuckDuckGo will use Apple Maps in search results
27 votes -
Pew study: 74% of Facebook users did not know Facebook was maintaining a list of their interests/traits, 51% were uncomfortable with it, and 27% felt the list was inaccurate
21 votes -
Transparency-seeking OPEN Government Data Act signed into law
7 votes -
Amazon unveiled Key for Garage—a system that allows Amazon drivers to unlock garage doors to make secure deliveries.
15 votes -
For owners of Amazon’s Ring security cameras, strangers may have been watching too
10 votes -
(Don't) return to sender: How to protect yourself from email tracking
13 votes -
T-Mobile, Sprint, and AT&T Are Selling Customers' Real-Time Location Data, And It's Falling Into the Wrong Hands
29 votes -
How Facebook tracks you on Android
18 votes -
Hey Google! When did I ask you to access my Purchase details?
5 votes -
Roger Dingledine - Next Generation Tor Onion Services
5 votes -
Chinese schools monitor students activities, targeting truancy with 'intelligent uniforms'
Straight from the horse's mouth - China's own Global Times: Chinese schools monitor students activities, targeting truancy with 'intelligent uniforms' A different view - the Australian...
Straight from the horse's mouth - China's own Global Times: Chinese schools monitor students activities, targeting truancy with 'intelligent uniforms'
A different view - the Australian Broadcasting Commission: Chinese schools enforce 'smart uniforms' with GPS tracking system to monitor students
11 votes -
How Google tracks your personal information
7 votes -
At Blind, a security lapse revealed private complaints from Silicon Valley employees
13 votes -
Should I be using a VPN constantly?
Do you? What do you recommend?
16 votes -
Advocating for privacy in Australia
9 votes -
Amazon sends 1,700 Alexa voice recordings to a random person
17 votes -
Potential impact of two IoT security and privacy laws on tech industry
6 votes -
Internal documents show that Facebook gave Microsoft, Amazon, Spotify and others far greater access to people’s data than it has disclosed
25 votes -
Google’s secret China project “effectively ended” after internal confrontation
12 votes -
Australia passes controversial encryption-busting law
23 votes -
Facebook says new bug allowed apps access to private photos of up to 6.8m users
33 votes -
'You bunch of idiots': Australia's tech industry savages Labor for backing bill
26 votes -
Google CEO Sundar Pichai testifies before the House Judiciary Committee on Data Collection
15 votes -
Your apps know where you were last night, and they’re not keeping it secret
23 votes -
Google+ shutdown speeds up, new privacy bug affected 52.5 million users
16 votes -
Australia data encryption laws explained
8 votes -
Google, Apple, Facebook face world-first encryption laws in Australia: Tech companies can be forced to "build new capabilities" that allow access to encrypted messages.
17 votes -
Mark Zuckerberg's biggest problem: Internal tensions at Facebook are boiling over
12 votes -
Marriott admits hackers stole data on 500 million guests; passports and credit card info included
21 votes -
You snooze, you lose: Insurers make the old adage literally true – Propublica/NPR investigation into billing and privacy concerns for sleep apnea patients
12 votes -
The Snowden Legacy, part one: What’s changed, really?
11 votes -
You snooze, you lose: Insurers make the old adage literally true
8 votes -
Amazon admits it exposed customer email addresses, but refuses to give details
14 votes -
“He Doesn’t Believe in It”: Mark Zuckerberg Has Never Cared About Your Privacy, and He’s Not Going to Change
23 votes