
South Wales Police Log Non-Criminal Islam Criticism
The conduct is lawful, the speech is legal, and yet the paperwork still ends up in front of your next employer.
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The conduct is lawful, the speech is legal, and yet the paperwork still ends up in front of your next employer.

The government spent years defending a market that sells anyone’s location to anyone with money and the bill just came due in a war zone.
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End-to-end encrypted, with asterisks nobody reads.

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.
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The body Brussels built to make its censorship regime work just published the numbers proving it can’t.

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.

Minnesota just mandated that platforms spy on every user to figure out which ones are kids.

The justices let an addiction case proceed and buried inside it is the end of logging on as a stranger.

The numbers are small but for the first time the friction of switching looks cheaper to users than the cost of staying.

California fixed the most obvious problem with its age-tracking law but replaced it with a version that follows you across the entire internet.

Texas is using a child safety lawsuit to try to end anonymous access to Discord entirely.

The regulators who would decide what counts as “reliable” news are appointed through a chain that starts with the same politicians whose coverage they’d be curating.

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