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24 votes
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Google’s 4,000-word privacy policy is a secret history of the internet
7 votes -
Can ‘pods’ bring quiet to the noisy open office?
5 votes -
Notes on privacy and data collection of Matrix.org
12 votes -
An interesting study into how ads are fingerprinting your devices
16 votes -
When Myspace was king, employees abused a tool called ‘overlord’ to spy on users
8 votes -
I’m a journalist but didn't fully realize the terrible power of US border officials until they violated my rights and privacy
41 votes -
When do you use a VPN?
I try to be privacy focused. I don't use social media, I use Firefox with adblock and tracker protection, with duck duck go as my search engine. I also pay for proton vpn. My question is, when...
I try to be privacy focused. I don't use social media, I use Firefox with adblock and tracker protection, with duck duck go as my search engine. I also pay for proton vpn. My question is, when should I use it? I use it when I'm on open networks on my phone, but that's about it. Do you guys run it 24/7 on your computer?
25 votes -
YouTube under US Federal investigation over allegations it violates children’s privacy
9 votes -
The new wilderness
9 votes -
In court, Facebook blames users for destroying their own right to privacy
19 votes -
Masks, cash and apps: How Hong Kong’s protesters find ways to outwit the surveillance state
10 votes -
Data bleeding everywhere: A story of period trackers
11 votes -
Nextcloud signs public letter, opposing German plan to force decryption of chat
23 votes -
WeChat is watching
8 votes -
Chrome Incognito mode no longer detectable in Chrome 76
@paul_irish: Chrome Incognito mode has been detectable for years, due to the FileSystem API implementation. As of Chrome 76, this is fixed. Apologies to the "detect private mode" scripts out there. 💐
17 votes -
Ring is using its customers’ doorbell camera video for ads. It says it's allowed to
18 votes -
iOS 13 now shows you a map of where apps have been tracking you
13 votes -
The tricky ethics of using YouTube videos for academic research
6 votes -
How does Apple (privately) find your offline devices?
13 votes -
'It's time for us to watch them': App lets you spy on Alexa and the rest of your smart devices
11 votes -
Tech veganism
19 votes -
Apple's audacity, and what yesterday's WWDC announcements demonstrate about their future plans
12 votes -
US requiring social media information from visa applicants, permanent residents and naturalized citizens
15 votes -
Reddit user requested all the personal info Epic Games has on him and Epic sent that info to a random person
20 votes -
Facebook's Zuckerberg and Sandberg will disregard subpoenas to appear in front of Canada-hosted International Grand Committee on Big Data, Privacy and Democracy
13 votes -
Metadata Investigation: Inside Hacking Team
4 votes -
The rise of data dictatorships
4 votes -
On exercising your rights in privacy policies
@swipp_it: 1/ So, I guess my new "hobby" over the past few years has become reading terms of service/privacy policies for things I want to use and then trying to enforce my rights as laid out in those policies. Unsurprisingly, companies are often not certain how to respond to this.
11 votes -
Snapchat employees abused data access to spy on users
11 votes -
Tor Browser for Android 8.5 offers mobile users privacy boost
3 votes -
Apple arms web browser privacy torpedo, points it directly at Google's advertising model
4 votes -
Why shaky data security protocols for apps put LGBTQ people at risk
8 votes -
SensorID - Using smartphone sensor calibration data to generate a globally unique device fingerprint
3 votes -
Jeremy was fired for refusing fingerprinting at work. His case led to an 'extraordinary' unfair dismissal ruling.
13 votes -
This genealogy database helped solve dozens of crimes. But its new privacy rules will restrict access by cops.
4 votes -
Finally, US child data privacy could get much-needed reform in new bill
6 votes -
Why do people not like telemetry?
I often see people complaining about telemetry in things like Firefox and the like, but I've never understood why it was a big problem for your privacy. If it's anonymous and helps the developers...
I often see people complaining about telemetry in things like Firefox and the like, but I've never understood why it was a big problem for your privacy. If it's anonymous and helps the developers do their job, what's wrong with it?
26 votes -
Why WhatsApp will never be secure
16 votes -
Angry Birds and the end of privacy
10 votes -
San Francisco has banned government and police use of face surveillance technology
25 votes -
The AI supply chain runs on ignorance: Tech companies often fail to tell users how their data will be employed. Sometimes, the firms can’t even anticipate it themselves.
6 votes -
Maciej Ceglowski's Senate testimony on privacy rights and data collection in a digital economy
11 votes -
Samsung spilled SmartThings app source code and secret keys
5 votes -
How WhatsApp leaked my private information to advertisers
14 votes -
How facial recognition became a routine policing tool in America
6 votes -
In contrast to Facebook, Google seems to be leaning into the message that they have all your data, and emphasizing how that allows them to make your life easier
25 votes -
Nest, the company, died at Google I/O 2019
19 votes -
Mozilla Research Call: Tune up Tor for Integration and Scale
6 votes -
The dangers of in-game data collection
4 votes