6 private links
$2.5m-a-year CEO set to take a pay cut, so that's all right, then
Just because you deleted it, doesn’t mean the company did
Through deceptive designs known as “dark patterns,” online retailers try to nudge you toward purchases you wouldn’t otherwise make.
As the Snowden leaks continue to dribble out, it has become increasingly obvious that most nations planning for "cyber-war" have been mer...
Apple says Epic is violating its App Store guidelines.
tl;dr: Use advanced Google Search to find any webpage, emails, info, or secrets cost: $0 time: 2 minutes Software engineers have long joked about how much of their job is simply Googling things Now you can do the same, but for free Below, I'll cover dorking, the use of …
The Markup obtained internal documents that coach new employees to avoid creating “very real legal risks” in using words like “market” and “network effects”
A list of browser extensions that took minutes to add, but made my browsing experience immeasurably better.
A glimpse at what the social media platform does in the U.S. underscores that data privacy issues extend beyond China.
Apple says the Prepear logo resembles the Apple logo and has taken legal action against the small business.
New ethical principles restrict the work of Google's AI scientists on military projects, but key questions about the technology industry and the future of war remain unanswered
Lemmy
The malicious Chrome extensions have been installed by more than 80 million users.
Washington, D.C., journalists are clustering not in one “Beltway bubble,” but in “microbubbles,” says an Illinois study of their Twitter use.
pkg.go.dev sucks. It’s certainly prettier than godoc.org, but under the covers, it’s a failure of engineering characteristic of the Google approach.
Major advertisers on Facebook reduced their spending by millions of dollars in July, but not enough to significantly damage the platform’s revenue.
A guide to stingray surveillance technology, which may have been deployed at recent protests.