
You Don’t Own Your Kindle Books. Here’s What You Can Do About It.
The open source ebook ecosystem now has a genuine answer for every piece of Amazon’s walled garden, if you care enough to look into it.
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The open source ebook ecosystem now has a genuine answer for every piece of Amazon’s walled garden, if you care enough to look into it.

A California judge just decided who gets to use ChatGPT, and the person banned from it wasn’t even in the courtroom.
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A backdoor doesn’t check credentials. Once it exists, it’s a target for anyone with the skill to find it.

The forecast is free, but you’ve been paying for it with every place you’ve ever visited.

It’s the kind of question that should have been settled years ago, and the silence tells you why it wasn’t.

Government-built surveillance tools keep ending up in criminal hands, and the people who build them keep acting surprised.

The throwaway account you made years ago is sitting in a database, waiting for a system that costs less than a tank of gas to read it.

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.
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You don’t set an 80% adoption target for something you genuinely intend to keep optional.

The officer who arrested him later admitted under oath it never should have happened, and that doing it this way was department policy.

Every internet-connected device in your home carries an expiration date.

A British regulator bypassed every formal legal treaty and just emailed American companies into compliance, and 98% of them apparently obliged.

The state that wants to protect children online first needs every adult in Florida to hand over their ID.

A parliamentary committee just proposed giving a GCHQ-adjacent agency the power to decide which speech counts as a national security threat.

The bill makes no distinction between a fake video designed to suppress votes and a satirical meme poking fun at the premier.

A Brazilian judge has been ordering American tech companies to delete American speech for five years, and a new congressional report finally shows the receipts.

The regulatory price for handing three million people’s dating photos to a facial recognition startup turned out to be a promise to behave.

A European whose fingerprints end up in a US enforcement database by mistake would have to fix it through American courts.
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