privacySecurityGoogle May Owe You a Chunk of $100 MillionBy Andrew CoutsSecurityYour Tim Hortons Coffee App Knew Where You Were at All TimesBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaSecurityThe Fight Against Robocall Spam and Scams Heats Up in IndiaBy Varsha BansalSecurityThe Race to Hide Your VoiceBy Matt BurgessSecurityWhat Do Those Pesky 'Cookie Preferences' Pop-Ups Really Mean?By Dorri OldsSecurityGoogle Urged to Stop Tracking Location Data Ahead of Roe ReversalBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaSecurityProton Is Trying to Become Google—Without Your DataBy Gilad EdelmanSecurityThe Surveillance State Is Primed for Criminalized AbortionBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityHow GDPR Is FailingBy Matt BurgessIdeasDo People Caught on Ring Cameras Have Privacy Rights?By Sarah Esther LagesonIdeasIf Tech Fails to Design for the Most Vulnerable, It Fails Us AllBy Afsaneh RigotSecurityThe NSA Swears It Has ‘No Backdoors’ in Next-Gen EncryptionBy Lily Hay NewmanBusiness2 Visions Clash Over How to Fight Online Child Abuse in EuropeBy Morgan MeakerSecurityAndroid 13 Tries to Make Privacy and Security a No-BrainerBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe EU Wants Big Tech to Scan Your Private Chats for Child AbuseBy Matt BurgessSecurityThousands of Top Websites See What You Type—Before You Hit SubmitBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityData Brokers Track Abortion Clinic Visits for Anyone to BuyBy Andy GreenbergSecurityApple Mail Now Blocks Email Tracking. Here’s What That MeansBy Justin PotBusinessThe Fall of Roe Would Put Big Tech in a BindBy Vittoria ElliottSecurityHow to Protect Your Digital Privacy if Roe v. Wade FallsBy Lily Hay NewmanIdeasTech Companies Are Not Ready for a Post-Roe EraBy Alejandra CaraballoSecurityIndia’s New Super App Has a Privacy ProblemBy Varsha BansalGearHow I Use Targeted Ads as My Personal Shopping AssistantBy Haley SprankleSecurityHollywood’s Fight Against VPNs Turns UglyBy Ax SharmaMore Stories