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  • Sorry, judges, encrypted chat is not like a private thought

    A judge recently claimed that encrypted messages are similar to private thoughts. We, and the FBI, bed to differ.

    Violet Blue
    04.07.2021
  • quarantine pandemic era

    How it feels to survive Silicon Valley and a pandemic

    It shouldn’t feel like it took a pandemic to get Twitter to boot 7,000 QAnon accounts (and crack down on 150,000 more related to the violent conspiracy group), but it does. At least Twitter is doing harm mitigation around its role in this interconnected disaster. Five months in, you’d think 145,000 American deaths would move platforms like Facebook, Instagram, and YouTube to ban virus “truther” content, but nah.

    Violet Blue
    07.24.2020
  • artist depiction

    The Trojan Horse in Trump’s anti-Twitter executive order

    The order’s gist centers on the White House belief (or rather, tactic) that fact-checking the White House or its allies constitutes anti-conservative bias. So yeah, here we go with Section 230 (again). FOSTA was vague and sought to neuter Section 230, too.

    Violet Blue
    06.05.2020
  • FISA data security

    Yes, the Patriot Act amendment to track us online is real

    Looks like more bad news with the renewal of the Patriot Act/USA Freedom Act — and its terrible provision to allow government collection of Americans’ internet browsing and search histories without a warrant.

    Violet Blue
    05.22.2020
  • coronavirus, covid-19

    Contact tracing apps are coming whether we like it or not

    Can you imagine trying to get 80 percent of Americans, from the privacy and security aware to coronavirus “truthers,” to download a tracking app? It could also save a lot of money; our economy is bleeding out before our eyes.

    Violet Blue
    04.24.2020
  • teleconference with unwanted porn visitor

    Zoom is now 'the Facebook of video apps'

    A lot of us are wondering just how full of crap Zoom is. Acting like Facebook is already bad, even more so now that we’re all fighting for our lives.

    Violet Blue
    04.10.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    The surveillance profiteers of COVID-19 are here

    Our worlds are so upside-down and backwards right now that Wired claims Surveillance Could Save Lives Amid a Public Health Crisis, and privacy activist Maciej Cegłowski flat-out stated We Need A Massive Surveillance Program.

    Violet Blue
    03.27.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    We need to talk about sex, tech and COVID-19

    For the horny and lonely, sex and dating continues during the coronavirus pandemic. While Big Tech sticks its head in the sand, forcing its users to adapt, the sex industry leverages tech to show us how to play safe.

    Violet Blue
    03.13.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    Coronavirus bursts Big Tech’s bubble

    Virus enthusiasts from all over the world converged in San Francisco this week for America's largest security event: RSA Conference 2020. Before it began, fourteen companies withdrew from RSAC over concerns about the impending Coronavirus (COVID-19) pandemic. On opening day, organizers sent a message through the conference app asking attendees to stop greeting each other with handshakes.

    Violet Blue
    02.28.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    It doesn’t matter if China hacked Equifax

    On Monday the FBI and AG Barr announced "an indictment last week charging four members of the Chinese People's Liberation Army (PLA) with hacking into the computer systems of the credit reporting agency Equifax and stealing Americans' personal data and Equifax's valuable trade secrets." China's military refutes the charges.

    Violet Blue
    02.14.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi for Engadget

    Phishing scams leveled up, and we didn’t

    More than a bit of "I'm smarter than you" politics creates the divide between hacking headlines and what we actually need to worry about. On one side, researchers present findings at conferences hoping someone will raise the alarm and practical things will get done before things get worse. On the other, we have Jeff Bezos and his iPhone.

    Violet Blue
    01.31.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi for Engadget

    Your online activity is now effectively a social ‘credit score’

    Kaylen Ward's Twitter fundraiser for the Australian bushfire relief has ended. The Los Angeles-based model said she raised $1 million (by comparison Jeff Bezos donated $690,000). At the start of Ms. Ward's successful donation drive she had three Instagram accounts — none of which were part of the campaign.

    Violet Blue
    01.17.2020
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi for Engadget

    How home assistants ruined us, an explanation

    Our situation became clear when my friend ran through Trader Joe's screaming "ALEXA WHAT TIME IS IT?" This wasn't a cringey mockumentary comedy segment. It's the way we live now. I'm certain San Francisco's sea of terrified Postmates and Prime delivery runners parted for her, trampling an Instacart personal shopper already wallowing in the misfortune of crawling along the baked goods aisle, feeling blindly under tortillas for lost earbuds. Everyone wondering if they should yell at Google or Siri to call 911. Several cameras are trained on everyone, of course, to memorialize and broadcast these special moments forever.

    Violet Blue
    12.31.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    How did Google get Pixel 4 face unlock this wrong?

    Like many tech writers, I've been struggling to wrap my head around the brand-new Pixel 4's face unlock security #fail. Before the phone was even released, BBC technology reporter Chris Fox discovered that his review unit had a deeply disturbing security flaw: The phone's only biometric security option, facial recognition, worked just fine if the subject's eyes were closed.

    Violet Blue
    11.01.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    Here’s how AG Barr is going to get encryption 'backdoors'

    If you heard the reverberation of a few thousand heads exploding last week, it was the sound of information security professionals reacting to US Attorney General Barr saying that Big Tech "can and must" put backdoors into encryption. In his speech for a cybersecurity conference at Fordham University, Barr warned tech companies that time was running out for them to develop ways for the government to break encryption. FBI Director Christopher Wray agreed with him.

    Violet Blue
    07.31.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    How a trivial cell phone hack is ruining lives

    On a Tuesday night in May, Sean Coonce was reading the news in bed when his phone dropped service. He chalked it up to tech being tech and went to sleep. When he woke up, his Gmail account had been stolen and by Wednesday evening he was out $100,000.

    Violet Blue
    06.28.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    Sex, lies, and surveillance: Something's wrong with the war on sex trafficking

    Silicon Valley's biggest companies have partnered with a single organization to fight sex trafficking -- one that maintains a data collection pipeline, is partnered with Palantir, and helps law enforcement profile and track sex workers without their consent. Major websites like Facebook, Twitter, Snapchat and others are working with a nonprofit called Thorn ("digital defenders of children") and, perhaps predictably, its methods are dubious.

    Violet Blue
    05.31.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    Hey Alexa: How can we escape surveillance capitalism?

    Where do you go when you want to escape surveillance? When you want to stop feeling like you might be being listened to by microphones, or watched through surveillance cameras, or tracked by invisible tech gremlins burrowed within devices. Certainly nowhere in public. Perhaps it's your car. Maybe it's your home. Or even your bedroom? For some readers, that perimeter of personal freedom likely shrunk in February when news broke that Google "forgot" to tell consumers its Nest Secure came with a built-in microphone.

    Violet Blue
    04.30.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi for Engadget

    After Christchurch, we need more than digital-security theater

    Just after the Christchurch shooting I came across an article explaining how to make your Twitter, Facebook and YouTube accounts block violent videos. How-tos like this are depressingly necessary, because while Facebook removes an illustrated nipple for "community safety" at lightning speed with real consequences, the company isn't equally interested in policing content that's indisputably harmful. After the Christchurch attack, Facebook said it took down 1.5 million postings of the terrorist's mass-murder livestream within 24 hours, but only 1.2 million of those videos were blocked at upload.

    Violet Blue
    03.29.2019
  • Illustration by Koren Shadmi

    Russia is going to test an internet ‘kill switch,’ and its citizens will suffer

    Russia is planning to disconnect itself from the global internet in a test sometime between now and April. The country says it is implementing an internal internet (intranet) and an internet "kill switch" to protect itself against cyberwar. The question is, would this actually work? "This, as a single tactic, would not be sufficient," explained Bill Woodcock, executive director of Packet Clearing House, via email. "But it hugely reduces their attack surface. So in combination with many other tactics, it's a component of a reasonable strategy."

    Violet Blue
    02.28.2019