News - subcat

Microsoft scrambles to fix Copilot's privacy blunder
Published in News


A little too much oversharing

Microsoft's Copilot tool has inadvertently allowed customers to access sensitive information, including CEO emails and HR documents.

Smart TV’s are a digital trojan horse
Published in News
Tuesday, 08 October 2024 11:05

Smart TV’s are a digital trojan horse


Centre for Digital Democracy complains

The companies driving the streaming industry, including manufacturers of smart TVs and streaming sticks, as well as streaming service providers, have established a “surveillance system” that has “long undermined privacy and consumer protection,”

EU wallops Facebook’s data retention policies
Published in News


Zuckerberg can’t use your lunch pictures forever

The European Union's top court ruled on Friday that social networks like Facebook cannot indefinitely use people's information for ad targeting.

Google pays to make privacy case go away
Published in News


Writes $39.9 million cheque

Google will pay Washington State $39.9 million to resolve a lawsuit accusing the Alphabet unit of misleading consumers about its location tracking practices.

Apple sued for not providing good enough privacy
Published in News


Apple sued for not providing good enough privacy. Users complain that the company told them it was brilliant.

The Fruity cargo cult Apple is in hot water for not providing users with the privacy it claimed.

France's privacy watchdog fines Microsoft €60 million for privacy violations
Published in News


Take your nasty 'amburger eating cookies out of our sight

France's privacy watchdog has decided not to surrender to the software king of the world Microsoft and fined the outfit €60 million for dropping advertising cookies in users' computers without their explicit consent in violation of data protection laws in the European Union.

Europe’s plan to combat kiddie fiddlers worry privacy experts
Published in News


Turns out that it might just be an excuse to spy on everyone

The European Commission’s plan to combat child sexual abuse material online is already raising privacy concerns.

Apple shouldn't use privacy to crush competition
Published in News


EU watchdog barks 

European Union competition chief Margrethe Vestager said that Apple shouldn't use privacy and security concerns to stifle competition on the App Store.

Apple under antitrust pressure from French firms
Published in News


Advertisers up in arms

The French competition bureau has received complaints from publishers and advertising firms alleging that Apple is busting their collective asses.

Government COVID-19 apps skimp on the privacy
Published in News


Council of Europe warns

A report published today by the Council of Europe identifies a number of shortcomings in the protection of privacy and personal data in some of the legal and technical measures adopted by governments to prevent the spread of the COVID-19 pandemic.