This is Why You Should Care About Privacy
If you're still not convinced that you should be concerned about privacy you should watch this video.
If you're still not convinced that you should be concerned about privacy you should watch this video.
At least, for a little while.
I'm a 26-year-old from Montreal, a 27-year-old in Vegas, and a retiree with a penchant for photography – or at least that it what my browser would have you think.
US government restrictions mean company issued 'transparency reports' have to be vague. Twitter is trying to put a stop to that.
While Facebook has stated in the past that it "doesn't have shadow accounts or profiles – hidden or otherwise – for people who haven't signed up for our service," that doesn't mean it doesn't analyse the data at its fingertips to glean more insight.
After the furore over Facebook manipulating users' feeds for research purposes, the social-media giant has changed its guidelines.
Cyberwarfare is the use of hacking to conduct attacks on a target's strategic or tactical resources for the purposes of espionage or sabotage.
Companies are starting to build more secure tools for the internet, and Tor is at the forefront of development.
Nope — which is a Kickstarter, natch — is basically two little magnets.
Regulators have sent Google a six-page document with guidelines on how it should be treating user privacy.
You Buddah believe it.
It's time to start thinking twice before poking back.
It's not about the screen sizes, or the smartwatches, it's about how willing they are to hand over your personal information without a fight.
The US Patriot Act prevents companies from publicly stating that information has been seized, so it seems Apple has found a way to sneakily get round it.
Starting to sound like a lunatic internet commenter.
Your streaming days might be limited.