
5 Tech Giants Let UK Speech Regulator Preview New Features
Five tech giants just agreed to show a government regulator their homework before turning it in, even though the law never said they had to.
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Five tech giants just agreed to show a government regulator their homework before turning it in, even though the law never said they had to.

A Texas town used a bomb-threat law to jail a mom who posted about brown water the city later admitted was undrinkable.
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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.

The government is building glasses that turn a glance into a federal database query and the deployment date is already set.

It’s a surprisingly coherent product, but whether you actually need it depends entirely on which kind of privacy user you are.

Twenty years of privacy advice gets a stress test against the booking infrastructure built to turn your hesitation into a higher fare.

The justices seem ready to decide that mass surveillance is fine if you could have turned it off.

The lesson Amazon keeps relearning is that nothing sells a novel quite like declaring it unsellable.

The opt-out button you’ve been clicking is decorative, so here is the browser build that stops asking nicely.
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The government posted “use a VPN” the same week two VPN companies threatened to leave rather than comply with a new surveillance bill.

The lawsuit lands as facial recognition quietly becomes the price of admission at stadiums, airports, and more.

Six years later, the legal vacuum that made domestic surveillance possible hasn’t moved an inch.

The lawsuit designed to protect children from surveillance essentially mandates a biometric surveillance system for 150 million users.

The platform that once called Ofcom’s approach “overreach” just handed it a 48-hour content removal pipeline with quarterly audits.

The law Parliament sold as a shield for children just became a sword against a political campaign.

Your chant at a march is now judged not by the crowd around you but by how a stranger might feel watching a clip of it online.

The British speech regulator proved it doesn’t understand the internet.

Britain’s civil liberties are eroding one deployment at a time.

They do. That’s the problem.
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