
GrapheneOS Defies Age Verification Surveillance Laws, Vowing to Protect User Privacy Worldwide
GrapheneOS is doing what Apple and Google won’t: treating market access as a worthwhile price for not building a government ID layer into your phone.
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GrapheneOS is doing what Apple and Google won’t: treating market access as a worthwhile price for not building a government ID layer into your phone.

The state has spent years closing every legal loophole standing between Ohio and a world where adults must show ID to use the internet.
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One developer has already registered their distribution under the law’s own definitions and declared intentional noncompliance on the front page.

The ad that followed you around the internet turns out to be the least invasive thing it was doing.

Attacks are usually from human error, not technology, which is why a five-minute audit is the most important thing you should be doing.

Proton Mail’s encryption held perfectly in a recent case. Here’s everything else that didn’t, and how to fix it.

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.
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The bloc that fined X for restricting researcher data access then cited X’s comparatively open data as the reason it leads the disinformation statistics.

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.

The regulator issued a £520,000 fine; the lawyer replied with a picture of a hamster.

A jury just ruled that making songs about what police did in your own home is exactly the kind of speech the First Amendment was built for.

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.

Brazil built a national age verification system, called it child protection, and buried the surveillance infrastructure in the footnotes.

Blocking a Ukrainian education portal and killing Google Drive for 12 hours is what happens when private media companies get to shut down the internet with no court, no notice, and no appeal.

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.
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