Topic: AT&T
AT&T has a history of cooperating with government surveillance programs and collecting extensive user data, often without adequate transparency. The company has faced criticism for its role in enabling mass surveillance and for failing to protect customer information, as seen in significant data breaches. These practices raise serious concerns about privacy and individual rights in an era where personal data is increasingly vulnerable to misuse.
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Congress Mandated the Backdoors That Got Hacked and Is Trying to Demand More
A backdoor doesn’t check credentials. Once it exists, it’s a target for anyone with the skill to find it.
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Senator Wyden Accuses AT&T, Verizon, and T-Mobile of Failing to Warn Senate of Surveillance
Phone carriers let covert surveillance slip through the cracks of Senate oversight.
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Room 641A: Mark Klein and the NSA’s Perfect Crime
Klein exposed the backbone of mass surveillance, forcing America to confront the cost of its security state.
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Verizon, AT&T, and T-Mobile Say They Have a Legal Right To Track You and Sell Your Data
The legal battle raises questions about privacy, corporate accountability, and the boundaries of regulatory power.
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JD Vance Slams The Surveillance State, Government Backdoors
Vance calls for curbing intelligence agency growth, arguing national priorities should focus on economic issues over expanded surveillance.
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The Secretive Government Program That Allows Law Enforcement To Access Phone Records of Innocent US Citizens
An opaque surveillance system.
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Corporate coalition pushes government to create digital ID infrastructure
Major corporations want to see the installation of digital ID.
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Rights holders end legal demands for ISPs to ban movie pirates from the internet
The plaintiffs must have realized their demands were overreaching.
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Android messages and dialer apps quietly send data to Google, report alleges
The report suggests it could be a breach of privacy laws.












