privacyScienceAn Effort to ID Tulsa Race Massacre Victims Raises Privacy IssuesBy Emily MullinSecurityThe US May Soon Learn What a ‘Kid-Friendly’ Internet Looks Like By Pia CeresSecurityYou’re Not Stringer Bell, but You May Still Need a Burner PhoneBy Omar L. GallagaIdeasThe FTC May (Finally) Protect Americans From Data BrokersBy Justin ShermanIdeasNothing Is Protecting Child Influencers From ExploitationBy Ellen WalkerSecurityScans of Students’ Homes During Tests Are Deemed UnconstitutionalBy Ashley Belanger, Ars TechnicaSecurityThe Privacy Flaw Threatening US DemocracyBy Thor BensonSecurityThe Low Threshold for Face Recognition in New DelhiBy Varsha BansalIdeasWhat Adults Don't Get About Teens and Digital LifeBy Emily Weinstein and Carrie JamesSecurityThe Android 13 Privacy Settings You Should Update NowBy Matt BurgessSciencePolice Used a Baby’s DNA to Investigate Its Father for a CrimeBy Emily MullinSecurityThe Feds Gear Up for a Privacy CrackdownBy Matt Burgess and Andrew CoutsSecurityThis Anti-Tracking Tool Checks If You’re Being FollowedBy Matt BurgessSecurityMeta Just Happens to Expand Messenger’s End-to-End EncryptionBy Lily Hay NewmanIdeasHow the FBI’s Mar-a-Lago Raid Could Expose Trump’s SecretsBy Amy GajdaSecurityWill Europe Force a Facebook Blackout?By Matt BurgessSecurityA Phone Carrier That Doesn’t Track Your Browsing or LocationBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityHow to Use Lockdown Mode in iOS 16 to Make Your Phone More SecureBy David NieldBusinessThe iRobot Deal Would Give Amazon Maps Inside Millions of HomesBy Khari JohnsonSecurityAll the Data Amazon's Ring Cameras Collect About YouBy Matt BurgessIdeasAlex Jones’ Accidental Text Dump Is Hilarious—and AlarmingBy Albert Fox CahnGearKids Are Back in Classrooms and Laptops Are Still Spying on ThemBy Pia CeresSecurityYou Pay More When Companies Get HackedBy Matt BurgessSecurityRussia Is Quietly Ramping Up Its Internet Censorship MachineBy Matt BurgessMore Stories