Roomba's Next Big Step Is Selling Maps of Your Home to the Highest Bidder
Turning the friendly robot into a creeping, creepy little spy.
Turning the friendly robot into a creeping, creepy little spy.
Existing Right to be Forgotten guidelines weren't enough for France's top privacy watchdog.
Overnight, the Echo went from being a voice-activated Google search to a device that could be networked to a bunch of other devices.
I even listened to a John Mayer song the other day. Why? Because I can, and I can do it without anybody knowing it.
They can take your handset, but they can never take your freedom to put things in cloud storage.
Australia is currently having a meltdown over people wanting to keep their dick pics secret.
"For the first time, you no longer have to choose between conference calling and encrypted calling."
It'll let data analysts know the likely privacy implications of any queries they make on Uber’s data before they make them.
The kind of legislation that could have consequences beyond the US state's borders, and that's probably a good thing.
For Facebook, one legal problem has ended and another has just begun.
The government wants to see what you do online and collect information about you, Liberty thinks that's very bad.
To hide you’ve got a few tools at your disposal, many of which we’ve talked about in the past, and all of which add up to a largely anonymous browsing experience.
For once a governmental body seems to be doing the right thing regarding encryption.
Sphero is playing extra safe with its new Spider-Man Interactive App-Enabled Super Hero toy by keeping everything it does offline.
The anonymous company’s challenge was revealed in new documents released yesterday by the Office of the Director of National Intelligence in response to lawsuits by the ACLU and EFF.
Meet the new boss, same as the old boss.