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5 votes
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Ring's doorbell app for Android sends sensitive user data to multiple analytics and marketing companies
10 votes -
App tracking alert in iOS 13 has dramatically cut location data flow to ad industry
21 votes -
Fifty countries ranked by how they’re collecting biometric data and what they’re doing with it
11 votes -
The Elephant Chart and how statistics made three of them
3 votes -
Japan's births decline to lowest number on record
11 votes -
The 2010s were another lost decade on climate change
19 votes -
Apple has secret team working on satellites to beam data to devices
5 votes -
If you made a claim for $125 from Equifax, you’re not getting it after court awards nearly $80 million to attorneys
19 votes -
Amazon has been given free access to healthcare information collected by the NHS as part of a contract with the government.
11 votes -
See how global warming has changed the world since your childhood
11 votes -
Oil is the new data
5 votes -
Would you pay for social media platforms and search engines if it meant they would not have any advertising or data collection?
(Someone posted a thread like this but for triple-a videogames rather than software and people said no so I wonder if software is gonna be different.) If you would or not, why? If you would, how...
(Someone posted a thread like this but for triple-a videogames rather than software and people said no so I wonder if software is gonna be different.)
If you would or not, why? If you would, how much? What would be the side effects of this change if it was applied on a mass scale? What would be the potential drawbacks?
Edit: Can also apply to video-sharing platforms or forums or instant messengers any software as long as it serves a general purpose and complies with what's mentioned above.
26 votes -
I'm the Google whistleblower. The medical data of millions of Americans is at risk
33 votes -
Interpreting GDPR data requests: Why does British Airways need to know that I'm 98% LGBT?
10 votes -
Smart TVs collect data for political-advertising use
16 votes -
Almost 7000 pages of leaked Facebook documents show how they leveraged user data to fight rivals and help friends
15 votes -
The most expensive cities for a cappuccino – Copenhagen has the highest cappuccino prices at $6.30 per cup on average
4 votes -
Migrating Russian eagles run up huge data roaming charges
14 votes -
The most gender-switched names in US history
9 votes -
Hackers steal secret crypto keys for NordVPN. Here’s what we know so far.
29 votes -
I dare you to try OpenStreetMap!
I dare you to try OpenStreetMap but also (probably most importantly) contribute! But first, some introduction, What even is OpenStreetMap? Okay well, OpenStreetMap is a database, licensed under...
I dare you to try OpenStreetMap but also (probably most importantly) contribute!
But first, some introduction,
What even is OpenStreetMap?
Okay well, OpenStreetMap is a database, licensed under ODBL, to create maps basically.
It's kind of like Wikipedia with how the data is crowdsourced from well, anyone. The data can then be used for well, basically anything.
Research? Sure.
Wanna make your own map? Sure.
Wanna just use it for navigation without relying on anyone else? Hell yeah you can.Basically anything you want as long as you share people's work under ODBL and well, attribute them of course.
How do I use it?
Well, for navigation, on desktop :- Gnome Maps
- GraphHopper
- Qwant Maps
On mobile :
- OSMand
- Maps.me
- Maps (on F-droid)
- Navmii
You can also find other choices on the OSM wiki
Okay so now that you know how to use it for yourself, let's get contributing!
For this, since it's most likely going to be new users editing, we will use iD, it's available right under the edit button on OpenStreetMap's website!
Well, I would explain how to use it and all but thankfully, since iD is pretty userfriendly, there's a walkthrough to get you started.
Please DO NOT copy data from Google Maps or other services, it would violate their licenses. Only add information you personally know from local knowledge or aerial footage which you can use, iD thankfully lets us use most of the available ones which we have the rights to use for OSM.
If you need any kind of help,
the wiki is there which has tons of information but which also has links to mailing lists, IRC, Discord and other services. Oh and of course, feel free to comment below too.If you're already using OSM or contributing, feel free to talk about your experience below too!
Happy Mapping!
46 votes -
Fifty ways to leak your data: An exploration of apps’ circumvention of the Android permissions system
12 votes -
Scientist who discredited meat guidelines didn’t report past food industry ties
8 votes -
Why can’t we agree on what’s true any more?
18 votes -
DoorDash data breach - Affects approximately 4.9 million consumers, Dashers, and merchants who joined before April 6, 2018
12 votes -
Roll20 Blog - Conclusion of 2018 data breach investigation
11 votes -
Denmark frees thirty-two inmates over flaws in phone geolocation evidence – two-month moratorium on the use of mobile phone records
9 votes -
Norwegian researchers say data may point to second blast at Russian test site
8 votes -
Flaws in cellphone evidence prompt review of 10,000 verdicts in Denmark
8 votes -
We measured pop music’s falsetto obsession
7 votes -
The FBI and CDC datasets agree: Who has guns—not which guns—linked to murder rates
8 votes -
Twitter announces bugs in their advertising settings that resulted in sharing and using users' data even if they explicitly opted out
8 votes -
Sneaker and fashion marketplace StockX was hacked, with almost seven million records stolen
9 votes -
The FTC's settlement with Equifax is such a joke, the FTC is now begging you not to ask for a cash settlement
16 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission announces that people who chose the $125 option from the Equifax breach will receive "nowhere near" that, and has removed it as an option
25 votes -
Are Spotify’s shareholders failing to see signs of the early stages of subscriber saturation?
15 votes -
The data transfer project
7 votes -
Capital One says data breach affected 100 million North American credit card applications
11 votes -
Kyoto Animation recovers data from server after studio 1 fire
9 votes -
What you should know about the Equifax data breach settlement
16 votes -
What you should know about the Equifax data breach settlement
7 votes -
My browser, the spy: How extensions slurped up browsing histories of 4M users
15 votes -
EU opens Amazon antitrust investigation
8 votes -
Data Analysis with Dr Mike Pound | Computerphile
6 votes -
Becoming a data scientist: The career path for job changers
8 votes -
Open Place Reviews, an open data review site developed by osmand and maps.me
8 votes -
Data bleeding everywhere: A story of period trackers
11 votes -
'RAMBleed' Rowhammer attack can now steal data, not just alter it
7 votes -
Animation showing the hierarchy of health research since 1947
@drmohidkhan: This is amazing: the hierarchy of diseases studied in the last 70 years! From https://t.co/aANCZti0Io #research #clinicalresearch #letstalkaboutnets https://t.co/xWUe5Jq56P
3 votes