
Angela Lipps Spent 108 Days in Jail Because a Facial Recognition Algorithm Was Wrong
The software was wrong, but Angela Lipps still had to spend 108 days in a Tennessee jail proving it.
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The software was wrong, but Angela Lipps still had to spend 108 days in a Tennessee jail proving it.

The EU calls it a business registration tool, but the architecture looks less like a filing system and more like a foundation for something bigger.
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The six-month deadline to fix the consent screens and retention logs is the least interesting part of a ruling that quietly confirms governments are mandating surveillance infrastructure they haven’t thought through.

Modest but meaningful surveillance reforms, warrant requirements, parallel construction limits, may die on the vine if they stay hitched to a bill the Senate won’t pass.

Parliament won the battle over mass scanning, but the version of this law that actually passes could still harm encrypted communication forever.

The system that just leaked directors’ home addresses through a back button is also the one the UK government plans to store biometric data in.

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.
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