We Need Ground Rules on How to Keep Our Brain Data Private
As brainwave-detecting technologies advance, we have to consider how much control we should have over our thoughts.
As brainwave-detecting technologies advance, we have to consider how much control we should have over our thoughts.
The FBI is going to remarkable lengths to hide information about its surveillance programme that intercepts calls and texts with equipment called Stingrays.
Check if your PC security's been compromised – then the three steps to sorting it the hell out.
This is the best way to start to make a stance against snooping.
Hardware made by Western Digital, Seagate and Toshiba can reportedly eavesdrop "on the majority of the world's computers".
Security consultant Mark Burnett has just published 10 million passwords along with their corresponding usernames. It's a thoughtful offering to other researchers – but a legally risky one given the current hacking hoo-ha.
Because you're definitely important enough to require garments that block you from persistent picture-takers.
The head-scratching string of words was pointed out by a Redditor on Thursday and has since sent websites and experts in debate over smart TV privacy, with opinions ranging from "so what" to quoted text from 1984.
The man who built the free email encryption software used by Edward Snowden, as well as hundreds of thousands of journalists, dissidents and security-minded people around the world, is running out of money to keep his project alive.
The Investigatory Powers Tribunal has found that GCHQ has been spying unlawfully on British citizens. The ruling may mean those snooped on can request their data be deleted.
Troll-stamping measures incoming.
The American GCHQ will delete "incidentally" collected data only and not a kilobyte more.
Someone could be spying on every call, Facebook message, snapchat, text, sext, each single keystroke you tap out on your phone, and you'd never know. I'm not talking about the NSA either.
Researchers were able to pinpoint individual credit card users by examining just a few simple variables.
Funny cat photo/extreme porn forum feels need to break down its government data requests.
This video shows how unsettled people get when they realise exactly what they've been saying yes to on their phones.