
The Privacy Phone Is Going Mainstream: The Deal That Could Change De-Googled Phones Forever
For the first time, the most hardened mobile OS in existence has a manufacturer behind it with genuine reach in all major markets.
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For the first time, the most hardened mobile OS in existence has a manufacturer behind it with genuine reach in all major markets.

TikTok built a surveillance-ready messaging system and called it a safety feature.
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The US DHS is building a surveillance system vast enough to identify anyone on any street and is doing so without a legal framework to govern when, why, or whether it should.

Every concession Discord offered this week is a reason to stay distracted while the architecture of permanent surveillance gets bolted into place.

Eight months of flagged conversations, five wrongful death lawsuits, and a Canadian school shooting later, lawmakers have found their argument for turning AI chatbots into government reporting networks.

A leaked dashboard screenshot reveals how commercial spyware silently installs via zero-click exploits to read encrypted messages and activate microphones.

Our list favors projects that hand you the keys to the infrastructure rather than another polished cage with different branding.

How you lock down your phone now matters as much as what’s on it.

What 2026 will really measure is how Linux can survive contact with non-enthusiasts.

The myth of “social media addiction” has become a convenient moral shield for expanding digital ID systems, turning concern for kids’ safety into consent for mass surveillance.
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In a different timeline, wiring an age-surveillance layer into the boot sequence of every computing device in California is an idea that would have died in committee.

Two years of surveillance, £600,000 spent, and the program ended not because anyone asked if it was wrong, but because the data was garbage.

Mexico is six months away from building a surveillance system that knows the face behind every phone call in the country.

Simons was accused of running a thinktank dedicated to fighting “disinformation,” then used a government intelligence body to spread it.

The agency charged with enforcing the law that restricts children’s data collection just carved out an exception large enough to swallow the law itself.

Britain’s demand that Apple build a backdoor for everyone on earth, then quietly reframe it as a domestic matter after Washington pushed back, is the kind of legal gymnastics that makes intelligence lawyers nervous on both sides of the Atlantic.

The launch puts a swipeable, short-form feed on every major platform just as TikTok’s year of turbulence has left creators actively looking for somewhere else to go.

The man who called gender ideology education “child abuse” now owes $750,000 for saying so; not in a courtroom, but in a quasi-judicial hearing where no jury decided and no criminal standard applied.

Google is turning sideloading from a right into a permission slip, and the open-source community has until September to convince it otherwise.

Twitch is asking streamers to hand over a government ID and selfie to a controversial third-party service to collect money they’ve already earned.
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