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19 votes
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Canada arrests Huawei CFO. She faces US extradition for allegedly violating Iran sanctions
14 votes -
Sheryl Sandberg asked Facebook staff to research George Soros
12 votes -
How I changed the law with a GitHub pull request
20 votes -
The Snowden Legacy, part one: What’s changed, really?
11 votes -
Robot-soldiers, stealth jets and drone armies: the future of war
8 votes -
Amazon selects New York City and Northern Virginia for new HQ2 locations
20 votes -
Jeff Bezos is wrong, tech workers are not bullies
9 votes -
Homeland Security fell for YouTube videos about ‘Antifa Civil War’
9 votes -
FCC Republican claims municipal broadband is threat to First Amendment
12 votes -
Pentagon working on tech to identify protestors with bad/non-existent opsec
19 votes -
Gab's demise is just the beginning of a horrific new era of far-right extremism
12 votes -
Facebook's "paid for by" disclosure for political ads is easily manipulated and rarely verified
12 votes -
Walmart-owned Sam’s Club is opening a cashier-less store in Texas
15 votes -
Cellphone unlocking, jailbreaking and repairing now legal in US
43 votes -
Wisconsin’s $4.1 billion Foxconn factory boondoggle
12 votes -
Why the NSA called me after midnight and requested my source code
38 votes -
China suggests Trump 'can use Huawei' after iPhone tapping report
9 votes -
I bought used voting machines on eBay for $100 apiece. What I found was alarming.
26 votes -
It started as an online gaming prank. Then it turned deadly - the story of the "swatting" that killed Andrew Finch
18 votes -
Antiwar movement spreads among tech workers
10 votes -
Apple CEO Tim Cook is calling for Bloomberg to retract its Chinese spy chip story
13 votes -
Foreign disinformation is killing Americans
9 votes -
Facebook to ban misinformation on voting in upcoming U.S. elections
10 votes -
Pinboard on Twitter: Palmer Luckey has made the maximum legal donation this year to Steve King, the nation's most openly white supremacist congressman.
@pinboard: Palmer Luckey has made the maximum legal donation this year to Steve King, the nation's most openly white supremacist congressman.
25 votes -
Thirty-five US states tell the FCC to get off its ass and do something about spoofed robocalls
6 votes -
DOJ demands Facebook information from 'anti-administration activists'
17 votes -
Weak default passwords for internet-connected devices banned in California from 2020
19 votes -
The Army may have found its next rifle in a Colorado garage
18 votes -
How game design transformed Hillary for America's supporter engagement
2 votes -
Reddit founder Alexis Ohanian has $225 million in fresh funding to back health and elder tech startups
9 votes -
No cash needed at this cafe. Students pay the tab with their personal data.
31 votes -
Justice Department sues to stop California net neutrality law
17 votes -
In test case, US fails to force Facebook to wiretap Messenger (voice) calls
9 votes -
Does a trustworthy VPN provide privacy? If so, how do you know if a VPN is trustworthy?
It's hard to get a straight answer on this because there are allegations of shilling everywhere when it comes to VPNs (particularly when you discuss specific providers). There's also this post...
It's hard to get a straight answer on this because there are allegations of shilling everywhere when it comes to VPNs (particularly when you discuss specific providers). There's also this post which gets linked pretty frequently and which seems to throw a wrench in the whole idea.
For context, I ask because I have two main concerns:
- I have been the subject of a mild internet stalking/doxing, and I have no wish to relive that experience.
- I live in the United States and, if I am understanding things correctly, my ISP now has the right to sell my browsing data without my consent.
I have no love for my ISP and am all about the idea of blocking them from gathering data about me, but it seems the only other option is to hand all of my data over to another company who simply promises not to do anything with it. While I'm sure some of them are legitimate, how can you tell the difference between a genuine privacy tool and a honeypot?
23 votes -
The government wants airlines to delay your flight so they can scan your face
15 votes -
How China systematically pries technology from US companies
8 votes -
Technology salary guide 2019
20 votes -
Facebook
7 votes -
Text of u/DivestTrump's post about T_D and Russia propaganda that was deleted
51 votes -
The coders of Kentucky
7 votes -
The right to bear arms (and say shocking stuff on Facebook)
8 votes -
It's Reddit's turn: The 'front page of the internet' should be next to face US Congress
22 votes -
US mobile giants want to be your online identity
11 votes -
Nearly 600 Russia-linked accounts tweeted about the health law
9 votes -
Stop treating tech jerks like gods
24 votes -
Apple has permanently banned Alex Jones' Infowars app from the App Store
32 votes -
Who controls your data? Nine reporters in London, Paris, New York & San Francisco filed more than 150 requests for personal data to 30+ popular tech companies
8 votes -
Justice Department probes whether social media is 'stifling' speech
7 votes -
Ajit Pai does ISPs’ bidding, pushes for tighter rules on Google and Facebook
16 votes