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11 votes
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Samsung spilled SmartThings app source code and secret keys
5 votes -
How WhatsApp leaked my private information to advertisers
14 votes -
Binance security breach update - 7000 Bitcoin stolen (~$40M), will be covered by emergency insurance fund
7 votes -
Peter Thiel's Palantir was used to bust relatives of migrant children, new documents show
7 votes -
#DataScience Hive mind: I’m writing an article about the career path for job-changers who want to get into data science fields. I’d love your input.
It’s no secret that data science is a good career path. The jobs are in demand, the salaries are compelling, and the work is interesting. So how does someone break in? In particular, I’m...
It’s no secret that data science is a good career path. The jobs are in demand, the salaries are compelling, and the work is interesting. So how does someone break in?
In particular, I’m interested in how an experienced IT professional can move into data science. What advice would you give to someone with, say, five years of computing experience, who wants to break into the field? Tell me about the skills required, where you’d tell your friend to go to acquire them, and how to get a job without a specialized degree. What would make you say, “I want to hire this person, even if the individual lacks the relevant schooling”?
6 votes -
What a Denver suburb can teach the West about water
5 votes -
Backblaze hard drive stats Q1 2019
10 votes -
The Bob Emergency: a study of athletes named Bob, Part I | Chart Party
6 votes -
Every Noise at Once - An interactive visualization of Spotify music genres
9 votes -
How technology could revolutionize refugee resettlement
5 votes -
Women suffer needless pain because almost everything is designed for men
18 votes -
The data all guilt-ridden parents need: What science tells us about breast-feeding, sleep training and all the agonizing decisions of parenthood
15 votes -
Insights from new MH370 tracking data
6 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 -
Compromised credentials for a Microsoft support agent enabled outside access to non-enterprise Hotmail, Outlook, and MSN emails for months
9 votes -
A family tracking app was leaking real-time location data
7 votes -
Documents reveal US Immigration and Customs Enforcement using driver location data from local police for deportations
5 votes -
It’s time to talk about ditching statistical significance
19 votes -
Eight ways sci-fi imagines data storage
8 votes -
Your guide to the 2019 NCAA Men’s Tournament
7 votes -
Mozilla releases Iodide, an open source browser tool for publishing dynamic data science
14 votes -
How Google’s bad data wiped a neighborhood off the map
2 votes -
Facebook’s Data Deals Are Under Criminal Investigation
8 votes -
Tim Berners-Lee: 'Stop web's downward plunge to dysfunctional future'
8 votes -
Just what is intelligent storage? Here are three examples.
2 votes -
An email marketing company left 809 million records exposed online
8 votes -
Delete never: The digital hoarders who collect Tumblrs, medieval manuscripts, and terabytes of text files
35 votes -
My activity history on Tildes: an exercise in boredom
20 votes -
For years Facebook claimed the adding a phone number for 2FA was only for security. Now it can be searched and there's no way to disable that.
43 votes -
Revealed: Facebook’s global lobbying against data privacy laws
19 votes -
lib.reviews An open source, open data review website for high quality reviews on any topic
8 votes -
The route of a text message, a love story
12 votes -
Privacy vs "I have nothing to hide"
9 votes -
Factors that affect the reliability of SSDs, and how they compare to HDDs
5 votes -
2.7 million medical calls breached in Sweden due to an unsecured NAS
4 votes -
Huawei cloning Apple parts, rewarding employees for tech theft
9 votes -
Facebook charged with misleading users on health data visibility
8 votes -
Data privacy bill unites Charles Koch and Big Tech
6 votes -
Why humanitarians are worried about Palantir’s new partnership with the UN
8 votes -
Even years later, Twitter doesn’t delete your direct messages
4 votes -
Millennial life: How young adulthood today compares with prior generations
10 votes -
Telcos sold highly sensitive customer GPS data
4 votes -
Millions are on the move in China, and Big Data is watching
9 votes -
How ontologies help data science make sense of disparate data
3 votes -
Now your groceries see you, too
6 votes -
Data on discrimination
5 votes -
I tried to block Amazon from my life. It was impossible.
13 votes -
What cities are getting wrong about public transportation
7 votes -
VOIPO.com data leak
7 votes