At Apple's annual developer conference on Monday, the company rolled out a bunch of new features to keep your data safe.
Toggle the option off if you don't want the app to track your every move to deliver writing prompts.
Here's the easiest way easy way to find your misplaced iPhone
Give certain apps an extra layer of security protection.
The feature is finally out; here's how to turn it on.
In Brazil, Burger King says it's doling out "Hangover Whoppers," using facial recognition to determine whether you had too much to drink last night.
Stolen Device Protection on the upcoming iOS 17.3 looks like a promising feature to protect your iPhone's data.
Sports arenas across the country are racing to use your face to replace traditional tickets in spite of worries from privacy advocates.
Does surveillance tech help cops catch criminals? Not in NOLA, a new report from the city shows.
The games rating agency proposed using facial age estimation to scan selfies but said it would not stop kids from playing restrictively rated games.
At a raucous city council hearing, lawmakers and activists alike argued in favor of bills banning biometric tech in residential buildings and large venues.
A new Congressional bill, supported by 16 senators, would ban facial recognition and biometric tech for federal officials and pressure states to enact bans.
Protect yourself from surveillance with clothes that block history's most invasive tech.
The update also includes a new Emergency SOS shortcut, support for the second-gen HomePod, and bug fixes.
It's one step closer to Apple's vision of being one slab of smart glass.
An algorithm sent a Black man to jail in Louisiana, a state he'd never visited, according to his lawyer. Experts say he won't be the last.
A privacy expert told Gizmodo this was one of the first instances of a private firm using facial recognition to retaliate against an opposing lawyer.
A massive report highlights fundamental problems with facial recognition and how police lie about its uses.
A record number of travelers will have the option to skip security lines using the Transportation Security Administration's controversial biometric tech.
“To Google, it does not matter that the three-year-olds, the bystanders, and grandma never consented to Google capturing and recording their biometric data.”
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