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  • Engadget (iPhone), Getty Images/iStockphoto (Bars), DHS (Logo)

    New lawsuit shows your phone is unsafe at American borders

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    08.31.2018

    A recent case filed in federal court, in which an American woman had her iPhone seized and cracked by Customs and Border Protection in a New Jersey airport puts a whole new spin on the things we now need to worry about when leaving the country. It appears that now everyone's phones, despite country of origin or cause, are subject to nonconsensual seizure and search -- even if we refuse to give up our passwords. If you're not caught up on the story, news hit this week that a Staten Island mom coming home from a February trip with her 9-year-old daughter from Switzerland had her iPhone snatched, kept for months and accessed for no given reason. Apple did not respond to a request for comment by publication time.

  • Bloomberg via Getty Images

    About that Facebook trust ranking

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    08.24.2018

    To the complete horror and amusement of those watching the grand experiment Facebook is doing on everyone, this week we found out the company is assigning a reputation score to users that ranks their trustworthiness. The perversity of the situation was lost on no one. (And no, it's not the kind of perversity we like; this is Facebook, after all, the anathema to human sexual expression.)

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    How Google’s location-tracking issue affects you

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    08.17.2018

    Watching Twitter and Facebook commit reputational suicide over the past 20 months has been as painful as it has been entertaining -- entertaining in the sense that all anyone had to do was let the companies be themselves. The cost has been terrible, on democracy, the free press, at-risk populations and soon, I'll wager, on the economy. Still, it's hard not stay glued to our screens, waiting to see what awful things Facebook and Twitter do to us next. While we've been perversely absorbed by the epic-scale human rights incompetencies of Facebook and Twitter (and trying not to get, you know, murdered, jailed or exiled as a byproduct of the platforms), we kind of forgot about some of the other born-yesterday stewards of humanity. Like Google. Which has apparently been playing fast and loose with the whole "we don't track your location" thing.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Anonymous deals with its QAnon branding problem

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    08.10.2018

    When you're a notorious hacking entity like Anonymous, and a pro-Trump conspiracy cult (QAnon) steals your branding (while claiming you're the impostor), the obvious thing to do is declare cyberwar. That's exactly what Anonymous did this past week in a press announcement, followed by a social media and press offensive. So far Anonymous has managed to take over QAnon's hashtags (while adding #OpQAnon and others) and dox a couple hundred members of Trump's pedophilia-obsessed, "deep state" doomsday cult. QAnon's mouthpieces responded exactly as we'd expect, with taunts and tweets saying: "These people are STUPID!! They have no brains and no skills. Typical 'empty threat' terrorists! But DO NOT click their links!! Virus city baby!!"

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    When your Uber driver is a spy

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    08.03.2018

    Like other migrating beasts, hackers travel huge distances for feeding, breeding, and breaking things every summer -- at Defcon in Las Vegas. The way they move about the city is driven primarily by the availability of free booze at corporate parties or the convenience of air-conditioned infosec habitats; the heat makes them torpid. As such, everyone takes taxis, Ubers, and Lyfts everywhere, day and night.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    The first ‘blockchain baby’ is here

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    07.27.2018

    When you read the news that they put a baby on the blockchain, your reaction makes you one of two types of people. Either you think, Mon dieu, is there anything the magical fairy dust known as blockchain can't solve? Or you think: Surely, this is child abuse. For the past few years, techies have frothed and proselytized over the potential salvation of blockchain, the tech behind cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin. So it's hard to even know what babies and blockchain could even have to do with each other. Typically, outside of grifter circles, blockchain is associated with vaporware, shady fraudulent ICOs or solving things that aren't suited at all for blockchain's "distributed ledger" system. Oh, and largely solving things that aren't even problems.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Mark Zuckerberg: CEO, billionaire, troll

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    07.20.2018

    We imagine the scene at Facebook right now is like Kim Jong-il's funeral. Employees weeping in hallways, dripping anguished snot onto keyboards, beating their chests with unsold Facebook phones in an orgy of anguish at the injustice of media coverage regarding Mark Zuckerberg's unprompted defense this week of giving Holocaust deniers a voice on the platform. But I think we've finally figured out what's going on at Facebook after all.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Defending InfoWars, Facebook declines to stop fake news

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    07.13.2018

    This week, we learned in concrete terms that Facebook, like the Trump administration, has no bottom when it comes to hypocrisy and catering to neo-fascist conservatives. The hole has since been dug so deep by the company that its usual tactic of trading access for a positive PR apology tour may not work as well as it used to.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    UK politicians push for FOSTA SESTA-style sex censorship

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    07.06.2018

    If you're familiar with the phrase "that's a terrible idea, let's do it" then you might be one of the British MPs who think that the UK should do its own version of FOSTA-SESTA. That's exactly what Labour MP Sarah Champion has done by leading a debate this week for the creation of laws to criminalize websites used by sex workers in the UK -- under the rubric of fighting trafficking, of course.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    How France beat Russian meddling (and we could, too)

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    06.29.2018

    Since we're all expecting Kanye West to be a Supreme Court justice by Monday, it will surprise no one to find out that the completely normal, perfectly-operating administration in the White House is blowing off a new threat of interference and hacking in the upcoming elections. "Robert Mueller and the nation's top intelligence official say Russia is trying to interfere in the midterm elections," Politico reported, "but Republican and Democratic lawmakers say the Trump administration is keeping them in the dark about whether the U.S. is ready."

  • Jonathan Ernst / Reuters

    The scary truths about Trump’s nuclear summit

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    06.15.2018

    In the first summit meeting between the leaders of the United States and North Korea, Donald Trump met with Kim Jong-un on June 12, 2018, in Singapore. The two leaders smiled warmly, posed for cameras as friends, shook hands, and Trump spoke in glowing terms of admiration about Kim at the news conference.

  • Eric Thayer/Getty Images (Ajit Pai); Brad Thompson/Getty (Stringray)

    FCC shrugs at fake cell towers around the White House

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    06.08.2018

    Turns out, Ajit Pai was serious last year when he told lawmakers that the FCC didn't want anything to do with cybersecurity. This past April the Associated Press reported "For the first time, the U.S. government has publicly acknowledged the existence in Washington of what appear to be rogue devices that foreign spies and criminals could be using to track individual cellphones and intercept calls and messages."

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    It's too easy to trick your Echo into spying on you

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    06.01.2018

    The main reason most people get an Amazon Echo, with its onboard AI servant,Alexa, is convenience. But, after a family in Oregon found out Alexa recorded at least one private conversation and sent it to a contact in their address book, you might want to sacrifice convenience for privacy and personal security. Or, maybe you should at least keep the microphone turned off when not in use. Not very convenient, I know.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    The bogus expert and social media chicanery of DC’s top cyber think tank

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    05.25.2018

    Like viruses, cybersecurity charlatans are incidental guests in the body of infosec. These men sell false expertise, conspiracy theories, and invisible security potions and they are as unintentionally hilarious as they are alarming. Case in point: BuzzFeed's exposé of James Scott, cofounder of Washington DC's big cybersecurity think tank, ICIT (Institute for Critical Infrastructure Technology).

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    In time for hacking season, the US has no cybersecurity coordinator

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    05.18.2018

    Picture the scene: John Bolton stands proudly against a backdrop of an American flag, smiling beneath his pruriently confrontative mustache, dusting his hands off as befits a man who's just completed a task of wistfully virile middle-management. John Bolton just eradicated the White House positions (and people) who would stand between the United States and cyberattacks against our voting processes, our infrastructure and the tatters of our democracy. John Bolton grips his red stapler. John Bolton is in his happy place.

  • Westend61 via Getty Images

    DNA is just another way we can’t opt out of data sharing

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    05.11.2018

    Growing up in California, serial killers are as much a fact of life as year-round citrus or having a bit of Spanish in your daily vocabulary. News of the Golden State Killer's arrest came as a surprise and a relief to most of us whose early lives were shaped by a generation of fear. The Golden State Killer raped at least 51 women and killed 12 people (that we know of). Our parents literally slept with guns and knives under the killer's shadow, and the many others like him.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    How police are using corpses to unlock phones

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    05.04.2018

    If you've ever imagined a scenario where police demand you unlock your phone and thought, "Over my dead body!" — we have bad news for you. Here in our absurd dystopian future, having a phone means that upon your demise you could find yourself participating -- limp and lifeless -- in a legal search and seizure of your own digital property.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Suicide, violence, and going underground: FOSTA’s body count

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    04.27.2018

    Maybe you've noticed a sudden flood of updates to Terms and Conditions recently from the internet services you use. A close look at those agreements will show that many are GDPR related, but some are most definitely not. Welcome to the culture of fear, ushered in by the passing of FOSTA-SESTA.

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Tesla: Workplace safety, unions and the color yellow

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    04.20.2018

    Tesla's troubles with media reports on working conditions and union organizing took a hard right turn on Monday. In response to Reveal's report on Tesla's workplace safety, the auto manufacturer accused the Pulitzer-finalist of being "an extremist organization working directly with union supporters to create a calculated disinformation campaign against Tesla."

  • Illustration by D. Thomas Magee

    Mark Zuckerberg got grilled by Congress. Was it worth it?

    by 
    Violet Blue
    Violet Blue
    04.13.2018

    On Tuesday and Wednesday, Zuckerberg gave testimony to Congress in response to his company's role in the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Russian election interference and his website's utter nightmare of data privacy. He impressed people by wearing his absolute nicest human suit.