
FBI Resumes Buying Americans’ Location Data Without Warrants
The law stops the government from taking your location data, it says nothing about buying it.
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The law stops the government from taking your location data, it says nothing about buying it.

Sweden built the world’s most seamless digital identity system, and someone just walked off with the blueprints.
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Starting May 8, every Instagram DM becomes readable by the same company that sells ads against everything else you do on the platform.

The government insists it isn’t surveilling ordinary Canadians; it’s just requiring every company to store their location data, device information, and daily movements for a year, just in case.

Microsoft built a product that knows your cholesterol levels, your step count, and your last hospital visit and faces none of the legal consequences your doctor would for mishandling any of it.

The woman tasked with policing the internet has decided that getting sued across the Atlantic isn’t a setback, it’s a performance review.

Spain’s government will now grade tech companies on speech removal twice a year, with the same officials defining what counts as hate setting the scores.

Uthmeier’s April 8 deadline gives platforms one month to build the identity surveillance infrastructure that Florida’s child-protection framing was designed to make you forget about.

313 people documented what a missile attack on their country looked like in real time, and their government’s response was to make that a crime.

The law successfully drove millions of Australians to VPNs and unregulated sites.

A system the government is describing as a digital convenience tool could, under legislation its own consultation proposed, become searchable by police without people’s knowledge or consent.

The DVLA was built to check whether people can drive, and the Lords just voted to turn it into the largest real-name face recognition database the police have ever had access to.
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