Privacy SOS

Kade Crockford, Author at Privacy SOS | Page 180 of 182

  • House Republicans to hold data privacy hearing July 14

    In the latest Congressional move related to consumer data privacy, two House Republicans of the House Energy and Commerce Committee, Greg Walden and Mary Bono, have scheduled a consumer data privacy hearing for July 14. This is just another sign that Congress will likely pass some kind of consumer data privacy legislation soon.

  • Surveillance in schools: a spreading epidemic?

    The Guardian's John Harris reports that surveillance of schoolchildren in the United States is on the rise. He cites numerous examples to demonstrate that schools are becoming more and more like prisons, to the detriment of children and our society. Many people wonder how social media applications like Facebook are affecting the way in which youth view privacy in the digital age. But another concern is direct government surveillance.

  • Lookout Boston: the MBTA is watching you

    The Metro reported yesterday that Boston commuters can expect to be surveilled more closely than ever before, thanks to a flood of DHS money for surveillance cameras on trains and buses in the metro area. The MBTA even wants to install cameras inside train cars, the better to see you reading your phone with? Apparently, there are already cameras inside some Orange and Red line cars. 

  • Lawlessness in the US: the FBI gone wild

    Do you use the free, online service "Instapaper"? If you don't, you might want to. It's a great way to manage the loads of information the internet throws at us each day. It's simple: when you have an Instapaper account, you can put a shortcut in your browser bookmarks. Whenever you come upon an article you'd like to read but don't have time for at the moment, you click the shortcut and it saves the article to your Instapaper account. You can then access it, even without an internet connection. 

  • What is terrorism, really?

    The indispensible Glenn Greenwald, of Salon.com, describes the recent arrests of two US-based Iraqi citizens on terrorism charges and explains what 'terrorism' really means.

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