
Samsung Throws Its Support Behind Digital ID
Samsung is the last of the big three to ask for your face, which is exactly how a demand becomes a default.
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Samsung is the last of the big three to ask for your face, which is exactly how a demand becomes a default.

Texas drew its age line at the app store door and everyone has to show ID to get through it.
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The DOJ’s legal theory is that clicking “I Agree” on a standard app privacy policy means you volunteered to be identified by the federal government.

Somewhere between the biometric lunch lines and the 24/7 monitoring software, American education became a data hoarding operation with a teaching problem.

Google asked permission to gate the open web in 2023, got rejected, and just shipped the same thing as a product update nobody voted on.

The government is building glasses that turn a glance into a federal database query and the deployment date is already set.

It’s a surprisingly coherent product, but whether you actually need it depends entirely on which kind of privacy user you are.

Twenty years of privacy advice gets a stress test against the booking infrastructure built to turn your hesitation into a higher fare.

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.
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Somewhere in Westminster a whiteboard has “free speech = tobacco” written on it with three exclamation marks.

A Brazilian judge who ordered an American platform shut down for refusing to censor his own critics now has 21 days to explain himself to a Florida court.

The bill is in real trouble when even Google, a company that built its empire on knowing everything about you, thinks a government’s surveillance plan goes too far.

Five tech giants just agreed to show a government regulator their homework before turning it in, even though the law never said they had to.

A Texas town used a bomb-threat law to jail a mom who posted about brown water the city later admitted was undrinkable.

Hawaii’s taxpayers now owe six figures because their state tried to make certain memes illegal.

A shorebird biologist’s firing over a private Instagram post turned into one of the sharpest federal tests of government employee speech rights in years.

A bill sold as child protection builds the legal framework for surveilling every user in the state.

The incoming Ofcom chair’s to-do list includes treating VPNs as obstacles, demanding new powers over YouTube, and asking the Treasury for a bigger budget.

The architect of Germany’s original internet censorship law now wants the whole continent to stop worrying and learn to love the delete button.
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