
Judge Halts Colorado AI Law After First Amendment Challenge
The injunction lands the same week the Justice Department joined xAI’s side, marking the first federal intervention in a state AI lawsuit.
Speech. Privacy. Liberty.
Expose Big Tech censorship, government overreach, and threats to online freedom. Join thousands fighting for digital liberty.
✔️ Unsubscribe anytime

The injunction lands the same week the Justice Department joined xAI’s side, marking the first federal intervention in a state AI lawsuit.

Jawboning got its own House resolution and this time the targets have names.
THE LATEST
member exclusives

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.

Self-preservation looks a lot like surrender from the outside.

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 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.
Become a supporter and get unlimited access to investigations, analysis, and exclusive guides.

The 45-day extension passed without anyone being allowed to read the secret court ruling that found constitutional violations in how the program operates.

The unanimous decision revives a fight over donor lists that the Court has been losing patience with since 1958.

The remedies sought would end pseudonymous AI use and wire every ChatGPT conversation to a permanent law enforcement pipeline.

The reforms add paperwork and prison time for misuse, but they leave the part everyone has fought about for two decades exactly where it was.

Brussels wants every member state shipping its age verification app by year’s end, three months after a security researcher cracked it in under two minutes.

The verification system needed to keep teenagers off Instagram happens to be the same one needed to track everyone else.

The planned law privileges the biggest publishers.

Brussels wants the data shared at the same speed Google reads it itself, to recipients the proposal hasn’t finished naming.

Apple’s age verification rollout arrives without fanfare for a reason.

Lawton, OK, just gave twenty-six officers the keys to a database its residents never agreed to join.
BIG TECH ALTERNATIVES
Speech. Privacy. Liberty.
Get news updates, features, and alternative tech explorations to defend your digital rights.
✔️ Unsubscribe anytime