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9 votes
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How Not to Regulate Social Media: Proposed privacy and bot laws don’t target real problems, and would cause needless harm
4 votes -
What are your thoughts on the Blloc phone?
10 votes -
What you should know about the Equifax data breach settlement
16 votes -
FTC imposes $5 billion penalty and sweeping new privacy restrictions on Facebook
6 votes -
As authoritarian governments surveil the internet, open source projects decide how to respond
7 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 -
Navigating the tension between deplatforming and privacy?
There's a conflict in my mind that I would like others' perspective on. On one hand, I like privacy. For example, I use Signal as my primary messaging service because I like the idea that the...
There's a conflict in my mind that I would like others' perspective on.
On one hand, I like privacy. For example, I use Signal as my primary messaging service because I like the idea that the end-to-end encryption keeps my conversations private. It feels right that someone shouldn't be able to look over my shoulder when I'm communicating one-on-one with friends and family.
On the other hand, I also like deplatforming. I believe strongly in the idea that inhibiting communities that espouse fascist or other anti-social beliefs is a key lever in keeping their ideas from gaining social traction.
Unfortunately, I feel like there's a tension between these two ideals. Private platforms can conceivably allow for the inviolable platforming of hateful groups because they can then exist without social oversight or accountability. But maintaining some sort of oversight also feels wrong to me because it's fundamentally invasive?
I don't know what to make of this, as I do think we should be encouraging greater privacy on an internet where our actions are being scooped up wholesale for the benefit of large tech companies, but I also worry about how increased privacy measures will enable bad actors. Anyone have thoughts on this or want to help me sort this out?
9 votes -
Gotta catch 'em all: Understanding how IMSI-catchers exploit cell networks
4 votes -
Microsoft 365, Google cloud and Apple cloud deemed illegal in Schools of Hesse
13 votes -
US Federal Trade Commission approves Facebook fine of about $5 billion
22 votes -
Google employees are systematically listening to audio files recorded by Google Home smart speakers and the Google Assistant smartphone app
23 votes -
Gotta catch 'em all: Understanding how IMSI-catchers exploit cell networks
6 votes -
Apple pushes a silent Mac update to forcibly remove hidden Zoom web server
24 votes -
When Myspace was king, employees abused a tool called ‘overlord’ to spy on users
8 votes -
When do you use a VPN?
I try to be privacy focused. I don't use social media, I use Firefox with adblock and tracker protection, with duck duck go as my search engine. I also pay for proton vpn. My question is, when...
I try to be privacy focused. I don't use social media, I use Firefox with adblock and tracker protection, with duck duck go as my search engine. I also pay for proton vpn. My question is, when should I use it? I use it when I'm on open networks on my phone, but that's about it. Do you guys run it 24/7 on your computer?
25 votes -
YouTube under US Federal investigation over allegations it violates children’s privacy
9 votes -
In court, Facebook blames users for destroying their own right to privacy
19 votes -
Nextcloud signs public letter, opposing German plan to force decryption of chat
23 votes -
WeChat is watching
8 votes -
Chrome Incognito mode no longer detectable in Chrome 76
@paul_irish: Chrome Incognito mode has been detectable for years, due to the FileSystem API implementation. As of Chrome 76, this is fixed. Apologies to the "detect private mode" scripts out there. 💐
17 votes -
Ring is using its customers’ doorbell camera video for ads. It says it's allowed to.
18 votes -
iOS 13 now shows you a map of where apps have been tracking you
13 votes -
The tricky ethics of using YouTube videos for academic research
6 votes -
'It's time for us to watch them': App lets you spy on Alexa and the rest of your smart devices
11 votes -
Apple's audacity, and what yesterday's WWDC announcements demonstrate about their future plans
12 votes -
US requiring social media information from visa applicants, permanent residents and naturalized citizens
15 votes -
Facebook's Zuckerberg and Sandberg will disregard subpoenas to appear in front of Canada-hosted International Grand Committee on Big Data, Privacy and Democracy
13 votes -
The rise of data dictatorships
4 votes -
On exercising your rights in privacy policies
@swipp_it: 1/ So, I guess my new "hobby" over the past few years has become reading terms of service/privacy policies for things I want to use and then trying to enforce my rights as laid out in those policies. Unsurprisingly, companies are often not certain how to respond to this.
11 votes -
Snapchat employees abused data access to spy on users
11 votes -
SensorID - Using smartphone sensor calibration data to generate a globally unique device fingerprint
3 votes -
Jeremy was fired for refusing fingerprinting at work. His case led to an 'extraordinary' unfair dismissal ruling.
13 votes -
Finally, US child data privacy could get much-needed reform in new bill
6 votes -
Why WhatsApp will never be secure
16 votes -
Angry Birds and the end of privacy
10 votes -
San Francisco has banned government and police use of face surveillance technology
25 votes -
Maciej Ceglowski's Senate testimony on privacy rights and data collection in a digital economy
11 votes -
Samsung spilled SmartThings app source code and secret keys
5 votes -
How WhatsApp leaked my private information to advertisers
14 votes -
How facial recognition became a routine policing tool in America
6 votes -
In contrast to Facebook, Google seems to be leaning into the message that they have all your data, and emphasizing how that allows them to make your life easier
25 votes -
Nest, the company, died at Google I/O 2019
19 votes -
Mozilla Research Call: Tune up Tor for Integration and Scale
6 votes -
TikTok might be a Chinese Cambridge Analytica-scale privacy threat
13 votes -
Facebook faces a big penalty, but US regulators are split over how big
15 votes -
Introducing auto-delete controls for your Location History and activity data
7 votes -
Ireland is blocking the world on data privacy - it's the designated lead regulator for many companies under EU privacy law, but it's in bed with the companies it should be regulating
9 votes -
Facebook's email-harvesting practice is under investigation in NY
7 votes