
The Government Wants to Scan Your Face. It’s Not Waiting for Permission.
The US DHS is building a surveillance system vast enough to identify anyone on any street and is doing so without a legal framework to govern when, why, or whether it should.
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The US DHS is building a surveillance system vast enough to identify anyone on any street and is doing so without a legal framework to govern when, why, or whether it should.

In a different timeline, wiring an age-surveillance layer into the boot sequence of every computing device in California is an idea that would have died in committee.
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Every concession Discord offered this week is a reason to stay distracted while the architecture of permanent surveillance gets bolted into place.

Eight months of flagged conversations, five wrongful death lawsuits, and a Canadian school shooting later, lawmakers have found their argument for turning AI chatbots into government reporting networks.

A leaked dashboard screenshot reveals how commercial spyware silently installs via zero-click exploits to read encrypted messages and activate microphones.

Our list favors projects that hand you the keys to the infrastructure rather than another polished cage with different branding.

How you lock down your phone now matters as much as what’s on it.

What 2026 will really measure is how Linux can survive contact with non-enthusiasts.

The myth of “social media addiction” has become a convenient moral shield for expanding digital ID systems, turning concern for kids’ safety into consent for mass surveillance.

Encryption stands firm while everything surrounding it conspires to see through it.
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Google is turning sideloading from a right into a permission slip, and the open-source community has until September to convince it otherwise.

Twitch is asking streamers to hand over a government ID and selfie to a controversial third-party service to collect money they’ve already earned.

The company selling privacy as a feature is now running age screening on 18+ app downloads without explaining what data makes that determination possible.

The SPD is selling this as child protection, but the architecture they’re building looks a lot more like a checkpoint than a parental control.

The man who outlasted a French arrest now faces a Russian prison threat from the country he left behind two decades ago.

Reddit’s fix for protecting children’s data requires adults to hand their face and government ID to a third-party system that runs 269 verification checks per person.

The false advertising angle is LA County’s way around the First Amendment maze; not “did Roblox harm children?” but “did Roblox lie about it?” – a question courts are far more comfortable answering.

The UK’s age verification mandate arrived as promised, and Xbox delivered it by ejecting players mid-session, stripping away chat, and treating 18-year account holders like suspicious strangers.

Macron is asking Washington to welcome back the architect of the law that got X fined.

Colorado’s OS-level age verification bill sidesteps the failures that killed its predecessors by making Apple and Google do the heavy lifting and outsourcing the problem to a more powerful set of defendants.
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