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4 votes
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Tim Cook responds to Facebook on Twitter: "[..] Facebook can continue to track users across apps and websites as before, [..] we just require that they ask for your permission first."
@Tim Cook: We believe users should have the choice over the data that is being collected about them and how it's used. Facebook can continue to track users across apps and websites as before, App Tracking Transparency in iOS 14 will just require that they ask for your permission first. pic.twitter.com/UnnAONZ61I
13 votes -
Brave Today - A privacy-preserving news reader integrated into the Brave browser and using their new "private CDN" to prevent tracking what users are reading
10 votes -
Cover Your Tracks - A new EFF project designed to better uncover the tools and techniques of online trackers and test the efficacy of privacy add-ons (successor to Panopticlick)
19 votes -
Analysis of UK charity websites finds that tracking is prevalent, with almost all of the most popular charities including trackers for advertising or data brokers and failing to comply with GDPR/PECR
8 votes -
Auto industry TV ads claim right-to-repair laws would benefit "sexual predators"
18 votes -
Apple delays "asking permission to track" privacy feature in iOS 14, releases more information about upcoming privacy updates
12 votes -
Only 9% of visitors give GDPR consent to be tracked
8 votes -
Google starts deleting location history after eighteen months, by default
12 votes -
Oracle's BlueKai tracks you across the web. That data spilled online.
5 votes -
Schools turn to surveillance tech to prevent Covid-19 spread: "We are very much interested in the automated tracking of students"
6 votes -
DuckDuckGo now crawls the web regularly to create a free list of trackers to block
21 votes -
Employee monitoring software surges as companies send staff home
18 votes -
Tracking the location history of military and intelligence personnel using the Untappd beer-rating app
11 votes -
New York Times phasing out all third-party advertising data
21 votes -
The workplace-surveillance technology boom
4 votes -
Apple, Google ban use of location tracking in contact tracing apps
8 votes -
Amazon-owned Whole Foods is quietly tracking its employees with a heat map tool that ranks which stores are most at risk of unionizing
20 votes -
Community privacy concerns have forced the Australian Government to insist a coronavirus tracing app will neither track people's locations nor be available for law enforcement agencies to access
8 votes -
Australian government plans to bring in mobile phone app to track people with coronavirus
3 votes -
Enhancements to tracking protection in Safari: full third-party cookie blocking, 7-day cap on script-writeable storage, and more
10 votes -
Government of Czech Republic adopted tracking of infected individuals via cellular networks
5 votes -
Google wary of sharing user location data in pandemic fight
9 votes -
Google tracked his bike ride past a burglarized home. That made him a suspect.
18 votes -
Watching you watch: The tracking system of over-the-top TV streaming devices
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 -
Scroll: A subscription service partnered with major websites that removes ads and many trackers, and pays sites based on your usage
24 votes -
Google researchers find serious privacy risks in Safari’s anti-tracking protections
9 votes -
You can track your assets, including everything from ROVs to containers anywhere in the world with Iridium’s new IoT tracking capability
5 votes -
App tracking alert in iOS 13 has dramatically cut location data flow to ad industry
21 votes -
The last tracker was just removed from Basecamp.com
16 votes -
How to track President Trump (tracking of government employees using cell phones)
23 votes -
What we know about you when you click on this article—Vox has a pretty typical privacy policy. That doesn’t make it great.
11 votes -
One nation, tracked : An investigation into the smartphone tracking industry
15 votes -
How tracking pixels work
13 votes -
Behind the one-way mirror: A deep dive into the technology of corporate surveillance
9 votes -
In a major ethical leap for the tech world, Chinese start-ups have built algorithms that the government uses to track [Uighurs] members of a largely Muslim minority group
13 votes -
A new tracking technique using CNAME aliases to circumvent third-party cookie restrictions is blockable using a Firefox DNS API, but not in Chrome
18 votes -
How Facebook tracks you on Android
8 votes -
Deconstructing Google’s excuses on tracking protection
17 votes -
iOS 13 now shows you a map of where apps have been tracking you
13 votes -
We should opt into data tracking, not out of it, says DuckDuckGo CEO Gabe Weinberg
10 votes -
Tracking cursor movement in browsers without JavaScript enabled
@davywtf: Here's a PoC that confirms my hunch. *Neither* of these windows use JavaScript but the position of the cursor in the left window is sent to the right window. This works on Tor Browser with JS disabled. https://t.co/cnfOy5OkUj
11 votes -
What are the arguments against letting user data be collected?
It's obviously bad when "real" data like full names and credit card info leaks, but most data companies collect is probably email address and some anonymous things like which buttons and when the...
It's obviously bad when "real" data like full names and credit card info leaks, but most data companies collect is probably email address and some anonymous things like which buttons and when the user clicked.
Nevertheless, such data collection, tracking and telemetry is considered quite bad among power users. I don't support those practices either. But I'm struggling to consolidate my arguments agaist data collection. The one I'm confident about is effects on performance and battery life on mobile devices, but why else it's bad I'm not sure.
What are your arguments? Why is it bad when a company X knows what anonymous user Y did and made money on that info? What's the good response to anyone who asks why I'm doing the "privacy things"?
20 votes -
Oil traders are now watching workers’ phones to spot problems at refineries
5 votes -
A family tracking app was leaking real-time location data
7 votes -
Algorithms Allowed: a project that tracks usage of Google and Facebook assets in countries under US sanctions
6 votes -
By summer 2019, the Firefox browser will also block, by default, all cross-site third-party trackers
@jensimmons: By summer 2019, the Firefox browser will also block, by default, all cross-site third-party trackers, strengthening privacy without your having to do a thing." https://t.co/cqpQbSe9Ko
69 votes