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10 votes
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Departing Facebook security officer's memo: "We need to be willing to pick sides"
6 votes -
How to block ads like a pro
34 votes -
The tragedy of the data commons
3 votes -
Public Telegram, private strife | The precarious future of messaging apps
3 votes -
On the future computer era modification of the American character and the role of the engineer, or, a little caution in the haste to number (1968)
7 votes -
Hooktube is dead
Hooktube.com used to provide a private way to view youtube vids, blocking ads, bypassing region locks, and also pulling comments and search results via the api. All you had to do was replace the...
Hooktube.com used to provide a private way to view youtube vids, blocking ads, bypassing region locks, and also pulling comments and search results via the api. All you had to do was replace the you in a youtube link with hook.
No more. On July 11, this appeared on the changelog:
HookTube no longer uses YouTube api for anything, and most features (channel page, search, related videos, etc) are gone. No choice.
Which was extremely bad, but at least you could still watch videos privately right?
July 16: YouTube api features are back but mp4 <video> is replaced with the standard YT video embed. HookTube is now effectively just a light-weight version of youtube and useless to the 90% of you primarily concerned with denying Google data and seeing videos blocked by your governments.
rest in pieces
It was a good run, 1.5 years. Started as a quickly made addition to the norbot project, and within long the server had to be upgraded several times. Of course YouTube Legal was an inevitability at that point.
Special thanks to the many people who created plugins and extensions for hooktube, /g/, the five people who donated anonymously, and BitChute for working hard on a real YouTube alternative. HookTube will remain operational in the present state for those who only needed it for performance reasons. See you in the next project.:(
Alternatives include: invidio.us, youtube-dl, the Freetube desktop app, Newpipe for Android, and
you’re doomed if you use iOS.ETA: Actually, I just remembered, there’s Media Grabber for the Workflow app. And Invidio mostly works on mobile.15 votes -
The NSA’s hidden spy hubs in eight US cities
7 votes -
What if people were paid for their data?
14 votes -
'Data is a fingerprint': why you aren't as anonymous as you think online - So-called ‘anonymous’ data can be easily used to identify everything from our medical records to purchase histories
7 votes -
Microsoft urges Congress to regulate use of facial recognition
9 votes -
Walmart's newly patented technology for eavesdropping on workers presents privacy concerns
18 votes -
We are all public figures now
31 votes -
The woman in the #PlaneBae saga says she's been 'shamed, insulted, and harassed' since the story went viral and asks for her privacy
4 votes -
Facebook labels Russian users as ‘interested in treason’
13 votes -
First GDPR ruling: German court finds collecting domain registrar techincal/admin contact info violates Article 5
17 votes -
Facebook’s push for facial recognition prompts privacy alarms
14 votes -
State of the Onion @ iOS
3 votes -
How smart TVs in millions of US homes track more than what’s on tonight
17 votes -
ICANN't get no respect: Europe throws Whois privacy plan in the trash
11 votes -
Study on the effectiveness of fingerprinting countermeasures
4 votes -
Tens of thousands of Australians who have given DNA samples to sites such as Ancestry.com could have their genetic data examined by police without their knowledge
12 votes -
Typeform data breach hits thousands of survey accounts
8 votes -
Tech’s ‘dirty secret’: The app developers sifting through your Gmail
11 votes -
Samsung phones are spontaneously texting users’ photos to random contacts without their permission
16 votes -
The ad-based internet is dead but not because of privacy regulations
10 votes -
Facebook reveals it gave 61 companies access to widely blocked user data
21 votes -
Facebook patent would turn your mic on to analyze how you watch ads
19 votes -
Facial recognition found Capital Gazette suspect among 10M photos
11 votes -
A debate on NSA spying "Spy On Me, I'd Rather Be Safe". Very civil, structured debate between four experts in their fields.
10 votes -
Brave Browser launches Tor in the Tab beta
20 votes -
‘Everyone is breaking the law right now’: GDPR compliance efforts are falling short
19 votes -
The wiretap rooms: The NSA's hidden spy hubs in eight US cities
17 votes -
What do you think of the Cybersecurity Humble Bundle?
19 votes -
In huge privacy win, US Supreme Court rules warrant needed to slurp folks' location data
16 votes -
In major privacy win, US Supreme Court rules police need warrant to track your cellphone
40 votes -
Brave launches user trials for opt-in ads
8 votes -
Google update aims to show you how it uses your data
5 votes -
Alternatives to Google as a Search Engine?
Looking for something along the lines of DuckDuckGo and other privacy focused search engines. Any Tildoes have a go-to, non-censored, privacy focused search engine?
30 votes -
Joshua Schulte (of Vault 7 leaks) has been indicted for leaking CIA secrets
8 votes -
Big Brother facial recognition by police challenged in Britain
5 votes -
The EU's Copyright Directive, Article 13
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded...
Next week the EU parliament will vote for their new copyright directive. In general it contains some good ideas, but also some extremely bad ones, such as article 13. It will require all uploaded content to be scanned, and deleted if it might contain references to other copyrighted material.
The issue here is the word might. Due to the possible fines for companies that accidentally leave up something that contains a copyrighted work, they are incentivized to act more harsh than often necessary. It's safer for them to delete everything that looks like it might infringe copyright than risk the fine.
This could be disastrous for the Internet as we know it. And this is why many movements are speaking out against it. One such example would be the open letter to EU parliament. More information is available on https://saveyourinternet.eu/resources/, and you can find much more about it all over the Internet if you search with your favourite search engine.
What's your opinion on article 13, and have you done anything to make your voice heard?
13 votes -
Australia to force tech companies to allow government access to encrypted messages
13 votes -
Future of CopperheadOS looks murky
6 votes -
Digital IDs needed to end 'mob rule' online, says security minister Ben Wallace
6 votes -
Why should any non-Euro companies care about the GDPR?
18 votes -
HART: Homeland Security’s massive new database will include face recognition, DNA, and peoples’ “non-obvious relationships”
23 votes -
Like it or not, camera-equipped police drones will soon patrol the skies
11 votes -
The hits keep coming for Facebook: Web giant made 14m people's private posts public
12 votes -
Amazon has too many ways of watching you now
23 votes