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  • A view shows Blizzard Entertainment's campus, after Microsoft Corp announced the purchase of Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion in the biggest gaming industry deal in history, in Irvine, California, U.S., January 18, 2022.   REUTERS/Mike Blake

    Recommended Reading: The 'Diablo IV' crunch

    by 
    Billy Steele
    Billy Steele
    12.10.2022

    Recommended Reading highlights the week's best writing on technology and more.

  • Thomas Trutschel/Photothek via Getty Images

    MIT crypto system shares police data without wrecking investigations

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    08.08.2018

    Law enforcement routinely secures orders requiring that tech companies hand over data, but the targets of those requests don't always know if they've been under the microscope -- especially if there were never charges in the first place. MIT's CSAIL may have a way to hold officers more accountable for those decisions. Its researchers are developing a cryptography-based system that could help track these requests while still protecting investigations and police. AUDIT (Accountability of Unreleased Data for Improved Transparency) would require that law enforcers submit requests to a public ledger sometime after the fact using a "cryptographic commitment." The approach would ensure that police and courts send all the right documents in a way the public can see, but would keep the agencies' actions confidential.