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9 votes
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The great race to surrender our privacy (2019)
5 votes -
The tiny data firm at the center of the hydroxychloroquine storm
8 votes -
On WD Red NAS Drives: disclosure of Western Digital products that make use of Shingled Magnetic Recording (SMR)
15 votes -
New state-level model from Imperial College London suggests that epidemic is not under control in most American states, predicts major surge in cases and deaths over next two months
25 votes -
Tracking the location history of military and intelligence personnel using the Untappd beer-rating app
11 votes -
Florida COVID-19 data chief gets sidelined and researchers cry foul
13 votes -
New York Times phasing out all third-party advertising data
21 votes -
State and federal data on COVID-19 testing don’t match up
8 votes -
The need for software testing: Neil Ferguson's unstable epidemiologic model
10 votes -
Apple Store's temperature checks may violate EU privacy rules, says German data protection office
5 votes -
Predictability: Can the turning point and end of an expanding epidemic be precisely forecast?
7 votes -
How coronavirus charts can mislead us
3 votes -
This isn’t the flattened curve we were promised
13 votes -
How do/did all of you feel about posting your age on the internet?
(Semi-throwaway account because of personal details) This is prompted by /u/Adys comment to /u/Kuromantis. I'm currently 14, and online I've refrained posting my age on my main account (on this...
(Semi-throwaway account because of personal details)
This is prompted by /u/Adys comment to /u/Kuromantis.
I'm currently 14, and online I've refrained posting my age on my main account (on this site and others) to avoid it becoming a point in discussions (most prominently with politics, but any topic).- How do/did you feel about posting your age on the internet (in regards to being younger)?
- Do/did you feel like your decision made an impact on discussions?
26 votes -
Why it’s so hard to make a good COVID-19 model
8 votes -
Coronavirus state-by-state projections
9 votes -
The bar necessities: Five ways to understand coronavirus graphs
4 votes -
The lockdown effect
4 votes -
Sciensano releases all COVID-19 Belgium data in open formats (+ dashboard!)
5 votes -
Face masks for COVID-19: A deep dive into the data
7 votes -
Zoom's explosion in popularity is shining a bright spotlight on the service's privacy and data-collection practices
15 votes -
Japan's COVID-19 reports - 140KBs of unadulterated incompetence
7 votes -
How soon will COVID-19 peak? (And how to tell)
7 votes -
The real-time impact COVID-19 is having on small businesses and workers in the USA
4 votes -
Zoom iOS app sends data to Facebook even if you don’t have a Facebook account
10 votes -
Preliminary evidence suggests Bay Area shelter-in-place order is flattening the curve
11 votes -
Coronavirus tracked: the latest figures as the pandemic spreads
8 votes -
A third of coronavirus cases may be ‘silent carriers’, classified Chinese data suggests
8 votes -
Meet seventeen-year-old Avi Schiffmann who runs a coronavirus tracking website used by 40+ million globally
6 votes -
Prominent scientist dares to ask: Has the COVID-19 response gone too far?
8 votes -
As the coronavirus pandemic takes hold, we are making decisions without reliable data
5 votes -
Google wary of sharing user location data in pandemic fight
9 votes -
An interactive web-based dashboard to track COVID-19 in real time
8 votes -
A detailed factsheet on the Coronavirus from our world in data
5 votes -
I wonder what the social media meta data is like right now
Facebook et al. must be excited right now with this jackpot of acute behavioral data they're acquiring, in the context of a global catastrophe. I wonder if anyone has any insight here into what...
Facebook et al. must be excited right now with this jackpot of acute behavioral data they're acquiring, in the context of a global catastrophe. I wonder if anyone has any insight here into what kind of research they are doing? I know it's all usually a tight secret.
One idea that came to mind is that this would be excellent data to weaponize. Now we (as in social media corps.) can generate a pretty good model of what a global conflict looks like on the level of individual behavior and how that can be used for an advantage. The other edge of the sword would be this will help future public health initiatives but somehow I don't see this info being made publically available...
7 votes -
Sharing photos has the potential to reveal a lot of personal information, even if you're careful with removing metadata
9 votes -
Secret-sharing app Whisper left hundreds of millions of users’ intimate messages, locations, and other data exposed publicly on the web
9 votes -
Leaked document shows how big companies buy credit card data on millions of Americans
13 votes -
Why Amazon knows so much about you
18 votes -
Prompted by Brexit, Google will move UK users' data out of Irish jurisdiction so they are no longer covered by EU privacy rules
21 votes -
The story of how Saudia Arabia influenced two well-liked Twitter employees to access thousands of users' private information and pass it to the Saudi Royal Family
10 votes -
Dis.cool is creating profiles of Discord users who have never signed up for their service and they are refusing to delete them.
22 votes -
Metadata missing on ~music listings?
I just noticed today that in ~music, the "topic-info-source" metadata isn't visible in listings; it shows the author name instead. Clicking through to the post it's clear that it's been scraped,...
I just noticed today that in ~music, the "topic-info-source" metadata isn't visible in listings; it shows the author name instead. Clicking through to the post it's clear that it's been scraped, it just doesn't get a site name or favicon.
eg: Youtube link on ~movies versus Youtube link on ~music
Is this intentional? It sorta makes it look like everything on ~music is a text post.
3 votes -
Four Chinese military personnel charged for Equifax hack
10 votes -
Requesting an export of personal data from Amazon shows how extensively they track your reading habits
11 votes -
Surveillance on UK council websites - A study of private companies’ data collection on council websites across the United Kingdom
8 votes -
How ads follow you around the internet
8 votes -
Data
12 votes -
Avast announces that they are shutting down Jumpshot, their subsidiary that's been collecting and selling user data to marketing clients
11 votes