6 private links
A l'occasion du Congrès des Maires qui se tient à Paris, l'Adullact a remis ses labels "Territoire numérique libre" aux collectivités les plus engagées dans le mouvement du logiciel libre.
Download Wiper for Firefox. Black-list websites on Google to weed out low quality search results.
How to use Rust and BPF to intercept the data sent and received by programs that use OpenSSL.
A review of 3 automated systems in use by the Swiss police and judiciary reveals serious issues. Real-world effects are impossible to assess due to a lack of transparency.
Some companies regret sharing information with the tech giant and its Alexa Fund. “We may have been naive in believing they weren’t competitive with us,” said one executive.
Illegitimate reviews can hurt business for legitimate sellers, causing brands like Nike to sever ties with Amazon. Here's how to spot fake reviews and Amazon's plan to prevent them.
Contribute to yaelwrites/Big-Ass-Data-Broker-Opt-Out-List development by creating an account on GitHub.
You've possibly just found out you're in a data breach. The organisation involved may have contacted you and advised your password was exposed but fortunately, they encrypted it. But you should change it anyway. Huh? Isn't the whole point of encryption that it protects data when exposed to unintended parties?
Threema Goes Open Source, Welcomes New Partner
But the controversial phone metadata program played little role in the terror-fundraising case at issue, the long-awaited ruling says.
The lawsuit accuses the search engine giant of violating wiretap law and California privacy law by recording what users are looking at in apps.
The FBI has reportedly used a massive repository of travel data from Sabre to surveil people worldwide, including at least one in real time.
Rite Aid used facial recognition in largely lower-income, non-white neighborhoods. The systems included one from a firm with links to China and its government
Online advertisers don't need huge lists of the sites we access. Just 50-150 of our favorite sites are enough.
It’s possible that you posted something online 10 years ago, and it was fine back then, but 20 years from now you will hope that no one finds it. My message is: the Internet never forgets, cultures change, and retroactive laws exist. People can get screwed over digital data.