New Gun Store Tracking Code Deputizes Private Firms To Do Government's Bidding
Politicians bypass hard legislative work and constitutional protections to target activities they don’t like.
Politicians bypass hard legislative work and constitutional protections to target activities they don’t like.
Data collection is not the same as surveillance.
When taxing authorities get more resources and power, they will find ways to make everyone pay more.
The law has been abused to prosecute citizens for reasons other than spying. But there are better examples than Trump to highlight problems.
A mother-daughter arrest in Nebraska was fueled in part by unencrypted Facebook messages police accessed through a warrant.
Evidence turned over in a lawsuit shows that wildlife officers set up a trail camera at a private club to surveil hunters who may be breaking state laws.
After Amazon admitted it gives Ring footage to police departments upon "emergency" request, San Francisco Mayor London Breed wants cops to be able to access any camera at any time.
Plus: The Respect for Marriage Act, the Farm Workforce Modernization Act, and more...
The surveillance state’s appetite for sensitive information is dangerous under any flag.
Residents of Nogales are now under the gaze of a round-the-clock surveillance craft.
Grappling with surveillance implications of Roe being overturned
ICE has spent $2.8 billion since 2008 developing surveillance and facial-recognition capabilities, mostly in secrecy and without real oversight.
Plus: Lawsuit against Twitter can move forward, antitrust bills targeting Big Tech falter, and more...
Plus: A questionable algorithm can sic state social workers on families, governments aren't the only entities that can expand contraceptive access, and more...
Plus: The Warrant for Metadata Act, DOJ will appeal order ending mask mandate, and more...
Proposed EU rules would be equivalent to tracking all cash transactions
The Post Office's inspector general uncovers unrestricted online snooping by postal cops without any legal authority.
Plus: New rules on sex discrimination in education, economists warn of housing market exuberance, and more...
Cameras and tracking technology purchased to battle COVID-19 will be a lingering affliction.
The president's anticipated executive order stopped short of feared regulations but suggests federal unease with uncontrolled development.
“We totally stalked what they were doing on Google,” one teacher said.
Facial recognition software can secretly surveil and is subject to error.
In a program separate from the ones disclosed by Edward Snowden, we see more mass secret domestic data collection.
Regarding the authoritarian country's central bank digital currency, you do not, under any circumstances, “gotta hand it to them.”
"A future of bloodless global discipline is a chilling thing."
Social media accounts are windows into your activities, and the cops are watching.
“We have been through horrific things, but I’m still proud of being Uyghur," says Tursunay Ziyawudun, a survivor of China's torture camps.
Offending the powerful can be dangerous in an increasingly authoritarian world.
Why trust an agency that conceals information from judges but prosecutes us for lying to it?
A surveillance case will determine whether officials can be sued for "national security" rights violations.
The investigation of Trump aide Carter Page has exposed major problems with federal secret surveillance warrants.
Privacy advocates applaud the move.
Do Americans have a right to know the extent that the government surveils them?
An FBI document reminds us: Your cell phone provider knows where you've been—and will tell the feds.
When "protecting users' safety" actually means the opposite
Proposed IRS surveillance now limited to non-wage net annual transactions of $10,000 and above. Which is still ridiculously low and intrusive.
Nancy Pelosi, Elizabeth Warren, and co. insist that the IRS needs to know about $600 bank accounts.
With “keyword warrants,” anyone who queries certain terms on search engines will get caught in the surveillance dragnet.
The federal government and police are finding new ways to use drones to invade privacy.
More than 400 problems were found with 29 warrant requests, twice the number previously revealed.