
The Opt-Out Button Is Decorative: A Guide to Hardening Your Browser
The opt-out button you’ve been clicking is decorative, so here is the browser build that stops asking nicely.
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The opt-out button you’ve been clicking is decorative, so here is the browser build that stops asking nicely.

California’s new bills would let state lawmakers define, by statute, exactly how agreeable a chatbot is allowed to be.
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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 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.
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The refusal puts American mutual-assistance treaties off the table for European speech prosecutions, and Paris is the first to find out.

The same KYC mandates designed to stop money laundering now supply the face scans that enable it.

The bill that died with Trudeau’s election call is back, and so is the advisory panel that wrote it.

Governments are racing to mandate digital ID systems that turn every citizen’s passport into another entry on the next breach notification.

Buried in the definitions is a mandate that reaches every laptop, console, smart TV, and car infotainment system in the country.

The same technology sold to hold police accountable now scans 7,000 faces a day without asking anyone’s permission.

Ten million users already trust Tuta with their email, and now the same quantum-resistant math covers everything they store.

The agencies literally quoted Fight Club rules to keep their $81 billion blacklist quiet.

The Commission built the app on the same architecture as its planned continental digital identity wallet. That’s not a coincidence.

The First Amendment was designed to prevent exactly this; a law that punishes speech before any court decides whether it was harmful.
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