privacyBusinessThe Supreme Court Accidentally Spurred a Data Privacy PushBy Steven LevySecurityCongress Might Pass an Actually Good Privacy BillBy Gilad EdelmanSecurityThe DHS Bought a ‘Shocking Amount’ of Phone-Tracking DataBy Ashley Belanger, Ars TechnicaSecurityThe Most Popular Period-Tracking Apps, Ranked by Data PrivacyBy Kristen PoliSecurityAmazon Handed Ring Videos to Cops Without WarrantsBy Matt BurgessSecurityA New Attack Can Unmask Anonymous Users on Any Major BrowserBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityA Privacy Panic Flares Up in India After Police Pull Payment DataBy Varsha BansalIdeasCould TikTok Charge Users to View Your Videos? The Law Says YesBy Pia OwensSecurityThe Danger of License Plate Readers in Post-Roe AmericaBy Thor BensonSecurityApple’s Lockdown Mode Aims to Counter Spyware ThreatsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityEnd-to-End Encryption's Central Role in Modern Self-DefenseBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityGun Database Breach Leaks Details on Thousands of OwnersBy Matt BurgessSecurityIs Your New Car a Threat to National Security?By Justin LingIdeasHow Dobbs Threatens to Torpedo Privacy Rights in the USBy Amy GajdaSecurity‘Supercookies’ Have Privacy Experts Sounding the AlarmBy Chris Stokel-WalkerIdeasAre You Ready to Be Surveilled Like a Sex Worker? By Olivia SnowSecurityHow to Use Microsoft Defender on All Your DevicesBy Reece RogersIdeasParents Need to Know What’s Going On Inside Their Day Care AppsBy Alexis HancockSecurityHow to Password Protect Any FileBy David NieldSecurityAn Alleged Russian Spy Was Busted Trying to Intern at The HagueBy Matt BurgessSecurityCops Will Be Able to Scan Your Fingerprints With a PhoneBy Matt BurgessGearLawmakers Want Social Media Companies to Stop Getting Kids HookedBy Pia CeresSecurityShanghai’s Censors Can’t Hide Stories of the DeadBy Sonya YuanSecurityThe Tricky Business of Elon Musk Getting Twitter Fire-Hose AccessBy Chris Stokel-WalkerMore Stories