
UK Even Wants Image Scanners on Millions of Unsupported Devices
It is a surveillance mandate written by people who do not know anything about technology.
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It is a surveillance mandate written by people who do not know anything about technology.

It’s the newest entry in a Senate catalog of child-safety bills that double as the scaffolding for a digital-ID internet.
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Buried beneath the law-and-order slogans is a procurement list that doubles as the blueprint for permanent surveillance.

The same governments selling you a sovereign office suite are the ones legislating their way past the encryption it would run on.

The government spent years defending a market that sells anyone’s location to anyone with money and the bill just came due in a war zone.

Running it yourself means a price you set, a door only you hold the key to, and infrastructure that answers to no one but you.

End-to-end encrypted, with asterisks nobody reads.

The DOJ’s legal theory is that clicking “I Agree” on a standard app privacy policy means you volunteered to be identified by the federal government.

Somewhere between the biometric lunch lines and the 24/7 monitoring software, American education became a data hoarding operation with a teaching problem.

Google asked permission to gate the open web in 2023, got rejected, and just shipped the same thing as a product update nobody voted on.
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The company never had to break WhatsApp’s encryption, only to get someone to tap a link.

Silicon Valley gets the regulatory shield it’s been lobbying for and all it costs is the end of the anonymous internet.

The officers had a timestamp that ruled him out, a missing gun, and the wrong hoodie color, but the algorithm’s answer outranked all of it.

It is sold as a child-lock and built as a search warrant for every phone in the country.

Britain’s quiet encryption powers may now reach the phones of Americans who never agreed to them.

The fix Tokyo prefers would link the phone account in your legal name to everything you read, post, and scroll past.

Refusing to install state spyware would put tech executives in prison for five years.

The students found out their dorms held more than 330 cameras from their own newspaper, not the school that installed them.

A paper that has printed since 1924 changed its own name this week to stay one step ahead of a court order.

Google is volunteering to broker your legal identity for every ordinary thing you do online.
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