We are in the process of creating a new digital divide, where those who can afford it have privacy and a private life, while the economically vulnerable groups in society do not.
consumer-side methods, such as turning off the radios via airplane mode, shutting off the phone entirely, or even sealing it within a Faraday cage are all not nearly secure enough when faced with a government-backed adversary.
Freenet works by having each person involved dedicate a portion of their hard drive to hold content uploaded to the network. This is encrypted, so no person will know what is in their cache at any given time or be knowingly responsible for hosting any particular piece of content.
his business model would eventually call for serving up just one or two easy-to-miss ads based on the search query, which would generate enough revenue, he thought, to build a nice little business
artist and technologist Adam Harvey wants to create clothing that overwhelms and confuses facial recognition systems so they can’t tell the difference between clothes and their wearer.
As for Chrome OS, Android and iOS, come on===== They’re all built around cloud services; by design, they share everything you do with third-party services. What’s the answer? Desktop Linux.
This is where the next big privacy battle is going to be fought: over the right to use digital tools and services that hide us from prying eyes and obnoxious advertising, without fear of prosecution.
This signal-jamming offers just one modest example of the larger theory of obfuscation, the idea that if you can’t disappear online at least you can hide yourself in a miasma of noise.
* Mastodon is a free, open-source social network server. A decentralized solution to commercial platforms, it avoids the risks of a single company monopolizing your communication. Anyone can run Mastodon and participate in the social network seamlessly.
Adam Schwartz, Digital Privacy at the U.S. Border: Protecting the Data On Your Devices and In the Cloud, EFF, March 9, 2017
This guide (updating a previous guide from 20112) helps travelers understand their individual risks when crossing the U.S. border, provides an overview of the law around border search, and offers a brief technical overview to securing digital data.
As increasing concern among Android and iOS users grow around personal data they give up through WiFi connections, application installations and basic location services, Purism hopes to address those concerns by manufacturing phones that will operate with free/libre and open source software within the kernel, the operating system, and all software applications