Showing 289 to 300 of 352 results


AI Agents: Automating Tasks, Raising Privacy and Security Risks
Tech companies are developing AI agents that can control computers, automating tasks but raising major privacy and security concerns; Anthropic's agent vulnerability and Microsoft's Recall delay highlight these risks, demanding solutions balancing innovation and user protection.
AI Agents: Automating Tasks, Raising Privacy and Security Risks
Tech companies are developing AI agents that can control computers, automating tasks but raising major privacy and security concerns; Anthropic's agent vulnerability and Microsoft's Recall delay highlight these risks, demanding solutions balancing innovation and user protection.
Progress
48% Bias Score


Meta Smart Glasses Used in New Orleans Attack Planning
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the perpetrator of the New Orleans Bourbon Street vehicular attack on January 1, 2024, used Meta smart glasses to scout the area weeks beforehand, recording video from October 30th while cycling through the French Quarter, according to the FBI; although the glasses were worn duri...
Meta Smart Glasses Used in New Orleans Attack Planning
Shamsud-Din Jabbar, the perpetrator of the New Orleans Bourbon Street vehicular attack on January 1, 2024, used Meta smart glasses to scout the area weeks beforehand, recording video from October 30th while cycling through the French Quarter, according to the FBI; although the glasses were worn duri...
Progress
36% Bias Score


Amsterdam Scraps Smart Traffic Lights Over Privacy Concerns
Amsterdam cancelled its plan for city-wide smart traffic lights due to privacy concerns from the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP), which warned of potential tracking of citizens' movements via apps. A limited trial at two intersections ended in 2023, with the city citing maintenance costs and ha...
Amsterdam Scraps Smart Traffic Lights Over Privacy Concerns
Amsterdam cancelled its plan for city-wide smart traffic lights due to privacy concerns from the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP), which warned of potential tracking of citizens' movements via apps. A limited trial at two intersections ended in 2023, with the city citing maintenance costs and ha...
Progress
48% Bias Score


Apple to Pay $95 Million to Settle Siri Privacy Lawsuit
Apple will pay $95 million to settle a five-year-old lawsuit alleging its Siri virtual assistant secretly recorded user conversations on iPhones and other devices from September 17, 2014, to late 2023, even when not activated, with some recordings reportedly shared with advertisers for targeted adve...
Apple to Pay $95 Million to Settle Siri Privacy Lawsuit
Apple will pay $95 million to settle a five-year-old lawsuit alleging its Siri virtual assistant secretly recorded user conversations on iPhones and other devices from September 17, 2014, to late 2023, even when not activated, with some recordings reportedly shared with advertisers for targeted adve...
Progress
48% Bias Score


Limited Online Access to Dutch War Archive Frustrates Holocaust Survivors and Descendants
The website of the Netherlands' largest war archive received 389,000 visitors in one day but limited online access due to privacy concerns frustrates many, especially Jewish descendants of Holocaust victims seeking information about their relatives.
Limited Online Access to Dutch War Archive Frustrates Holocaust Survivors and Descendants
The website of the Netherlands' largest war archive received 389,000 visitors in one day but limited online access due to privacy concerns frustrates many, especially Jewish descendants of Holocaust victims seeking information about their relatives.
Progress
44% Bias Score


Apple to Pay $95 Million in Siri Privacy Lawsuit
Apple will pay $95 million to settle a lawsuit alleging its Siri virtual assistant secretly recorded users' conversations from September 17, 2014, to 2023, potentially violating privacy laws and raising concerns about data sharing with advertisers; tens of millions of U.S. consumers are eligible to ...
Apple to Pay $95 Million in Siri Privacy Lawsuit
Apple will pay $95 million to settle a lawsuit alleging its Siri virtual assistant secretly recorded users' conversations from September 17, 2014, to 2023, potentially violating privacy laws and raising concerns about data sharing with advertisers; tens of millions of U.S. consumers are eligible to ...
Progress
48% Bias Score

Judge Rejects Google's Motion to Dismiss Privacy Lawsuit
A federal judge in San Francisco refused Google's motion to dismiss a class-action lawsuit alleging the tech giant collected user data even after users disabled tracking, citing ambiguous disclosures and potentially deceptive practices. A trial is set for August.

Judge Rejects Google's Motion to Dismiss Privacy Lawsuit
A federal judge in San Francisco refused Google's motion to dismiss a class-action lawsuit alleging the tech giant collected user data even after users disabled tracking, citing ambiguous disclosures and potentially deceptive practices. A trial is set for August.
Progress
36% Bias Score

FATF Travel Rule's Impact on Bitcoin: Privacy vs. Regulation
The FATF Travel Rule, extended to bitcoin in 2019, mandates KYC data sharing between VASPs, raising privacy concerns and potentially undermining bitcoin's core principles; its effectiveness in combating money laundering remains debated.

FATF Travel Rule's Impact on Bitcoin: Privacy vs. Regulation
The FATF Travel Rule, extended to bitcoin in 2019, mandates KYC data sharing between VASPs, raising privacy concerns and potentially undermining bitcoin's core principles; its effectiveness in combating money laundering remains debated.
Progress
56% Bias Score

Amsterdam Halts Smart Traffic Lights Over Privacy Concerns
Amsterdam has stopped its smart traffic light program due to privacy concerns raised by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP), which highlighted the risk of tracking individuals' routes via apps communicating with traffic lights. This decision reverses the city's plan to install intelligent traff...

Amsterdam Halts Smart Traffic Lights Over Privacy Concerns
Amsterdam has stopped its smart traffic light program due to privacy concerns raised by the Dutch Data Protection Authority (AP), which highlighted the risk of tracking individuals' routes via apps communicating with traffic lights. This decision reverses the city's plan to install intelligent traff...
Progress
48% Bias Score

Apple to Pay $95 Million in Siri Privacy Lawsuit Settlement
Apple will pay $95 million to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging its Siri voice assistant recorded users' private conversations without consent, sharing them with third parties; the settlement covers tens of millions of users and follows prior allegations of contractor access to private recordin...

Apple to Pay $95 Million in Siri Privacy Lawsuit Settlement
Apple will pay $95 million to settle a class-action lawsuit alleging its Siri voice assistant recorded users' private conversations without consent, sharing them with third parties; the settlement covers tens of millions of users and follows prior allegations of contractor access to private recordin...
Progress
44% Bias Score

Dutch War Archive's Launch Frustrates Holocaust Survivors Seeking Information
The Netherlands' largest war archive website, "Oorlog voor de Rechter", attracted 389,000 visitors in one day, but limited online access due to privacy concerns frustrates many Jewish descendants of Holocaust victims seeking family history information.

Dutch War Archive's Launch Frustrates Holocaust Survivors Seeking Information
The Netherlands' largest war archive website, "Oorlog voor de Rechter", attracted 389,000 visitors in one day, but limited online access due to privacy concerns frustrates many Jewish descendants of Holocaust victims seeking family history information.
Progress
40% Bias Score

Partial Release of WWII Collaboration Suspect Data
The names of over 400,000 Dutch WWII collaboration suspects are now partially accessible online, a decision made after privacy concerns halted the initial plan for full digital access to the National Archives' Central Archive for Special Jurisprudence (CABR).

Partial Release of WWII Collaboration Suspect Data
The names of over 400,000 Dutch WWII collaboration suspects are now partially accessible online, a decision made after privacy concerns halted the initial plan for full digital access to the National Archives' Central Archive for Special Jurisprudence (CABR).
Progress
48% Bias Score
Showing 289 to 300 of 352 results