Four-wheel warning lights: how driving data ends up at insurance companies
The practice of sharing consumers' driving data with insurance companies, often without clear consent, is a very bad sign.
The practice of sharing consumers' driving data with insurance companies, often without clear consent, is a very bad sign.
Kevin Fu and his team reveal a serious flaw in the security of cameras: even when they are not recording, they can transmit data to attackers.
From Merkel's surveillance to PRISM operations: a decade after the Snowden revelations, what has changed?
The (heavy) collateral costs of the "free" Smart TVs that are appearing on the market, and which could spy on us 24 hours a day.
New platform connects thousands of cameras for expanded surveillance, but exposes citizens to privacy and cybersecurity risks.
Guaranteed anonymity with this sweatshirt equipped with infrared lights capable of evading surveillance systems
NSO spyware has been used by authoritarian governments to spy on journalists, leaders and activists around the world, a pool of news outlets report
Clubhouse has boomed, but there are many doubts about the security and privacy of this app. What are the current problems? Here is a complete map.
The global responses to coronavirus are very different in intensity and compression of personal freedoms. How much does it take to overcome the crisis?
Privacy is safe: an inexpensive anti-spy bracelet can silence all the microphones in the surroundings. A blast for criminals too?
What news for the next Apple devices after the acquisition of Xnor.ai? A Super Siri in sight and the world record for data processing.
Electronic pills with sensors show a patient's status to doctors and family members. But are they the only ones to have this sensitive data?
Nightingale project: Google has secretly collected millions of medical and sensitive data, including full names and birth dates. To do what? Is it legal?
Apple co-founder Steve Jobs gave bold interviews at ABC in which he reassured anxious Americans that no, the advent of computers would not represent any privacy concerns. But what comes to your mind, fools.
It's not enough to speed up privacy adjustments. It's Facebook Café time! The first of the Facebook Cafeterias will open in London on August 28th.
Facebook employees interviewed with the assurance of anonymity confirmed that they did not know where these conversations were recorded or how.
In the last few hours, there has been a #security alarm for #WhatsApp: all chats would in fact ...