PoliceScienceStates Are Toughening Up Privacy Laws for At-Home DNA TestsBy Emily MullinBusinessAdvocates Struggle to Control Police Use of Surveillance TechBy Sidney FussellSecurityLA Police Are Collecting Detainees' Social Media Information By Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaSecurityExplosion in Geofence Warrants Threatens Privacy NationwideBy Sidney FussellBusinessThe NYPD Had a Secret Fund for Surveillance ToolsBy Sidney FussellBusinessStruggling to Recruit, Police Turn to Targeted AdsBy Sidney FussellGearCitizen's New Service Helps Paying Users Summon the CopsBy Boone AshworthBusinessThis AI Helps Police Track Social Media. Does It Go Too Far?By Sidney FussellBusinessBaltimore May Soon Ban Face Recognition for Everyone but CopsBy Sidney FussellScienceCould Brain Training Help Address Police Brutality?By Amit KatwalaBusinessThe All-Seeing Eyes of New York’s 15,000 Surveillance CamerasBy Sidney FussellIdeasDoes a Robot Get to Be the Boss of Me?By Meghan O'GieblynBusinessA Border Town Confronts the Reality of Police SurveillanceBy Sidney FussellBusinessNew York Returns Its Police ‘Robodog’ After a Public OutcryBy Sidney FussellBusinessA New York Lawmaker Wants to Ban Police Use of Armed RobotsBy Sidney FussellIdeasNew York City’s Surveillance Battle Offers National LessonsBy Albert Fox Cahn and Justin ShermanBusinessThe Next Target for a Facial Recognition Ban? New YorkBy Sidney FussellIdeasThe Capitol Attack Doesn’t Justify Expanding SurveillanceBy Albert Fox CahnBusinessHow Your Digital Trails Wind Up in the Police’s HandsBy Sidney FussellBusinessSome UK Stores Are Using Facial Recognition to Track Shoppers By Matt BurgessScienceCops Are Getting a New Tool For Family-Tree SleuthingBy Megan MolteniBusinessAs Cities Curb Surveillance, Baltimore Police Took to the AirBy Sidney FussellBusinessApps Are Now Putting the Parole Agent in Your PocketBy Sidney FussellBusinessHow Police Can Crack Locked Phones—and Extract InformationBy Sidney FussellMore Stories