The man created—but didn't wear—a shirt critical of James Dolan, the venue's CEO.
Fusus’s technology allows police to tap into live feeds from public and privately owned surveillance cameras. In Toledo, Ohio, cops use the power to watch one particular type of location.
Civil liberties groups hailed the ruling as a victory.
Was someone spying on cell traffic at the political event?
By the end of January, the number of states with active consumer data privacy laws will have risen from eight to 13.
The Supreme Court recently declined to hear a case that civil liberties groups hoped might stop prolonged, warrantless surveillance with pole cameras.
The lawsuit filed Monday by a current Apple employee comes after federal labor investigators accused the company of imposing illegal policies on its workforce.
Privacy advocates, human rights groups, and multinational technology companies have all said the U.N.'s new cybercrime convention is a disaster waiting to happen.
Consumers have long worried their devices are listening to them. A newly leaked pitch dek from a large media conglomerate seems to imply that's true.
Police have long used them to track unsuspecting mobile users. Now you too can be a creep!
A program inside the U.S. Postal Service allows law enforcement agencies to request data about specific Americans' mail.
The laws surrounding 5th Amendment protections and biometric passwords are still undecided, so just turn it off.
The dreaded law enforcement contractor Axon has pioneered a new software for writing police reports, but critics are wary of its impacts.
Critics say a newly proposed update to the law would vastly expand the government's spying powers.
The company is also being sued by investors who say it exaggerated what the devices could actually do.
A federal court says your privacy is diminished due to the proliferation of video cameras throughout society.
Cameras in spaces like bathrooms have long been banned, but living room cameras were permitted.
Data brokers are selling loads of Americans’ data to the U.S. government, according to Senator Wyden.
Ring will no longer allow police to request video from users through its app, forcing law enforcement through a more arduous process.
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.
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