privacySecurityHow to Check Your Devices for StalkerwareBy David NieldSecurityChina’s health code system shows the cost of controlling coronavirusBy Tautvile DaugelaiteSecurityA New Gadget Stops Voice Assistants From Snooping on YouBy Dan Goodin, Ars TechnicaSecurityMozilla’s VPN has arrived to boost your online privacyBy Matt BurgessSecurityA New Map Shows the Inescapable Creep of SurveillanceBy Brian BarrettIdeasDefending Black Lives Means Banning Facial RecognitionBy Tawana PettySecurityHong Kong's Security Law Puts Big Tech at a CrossroadsBy Louise MatsakisIdeasCitizen Science Projects Offer a Model for Coronavirus AppsBy Elissa M. Redmiles and John KrummSecurityIt’s Super Saturday, the pubs are open and it’s a privacy nightmareBy Matt BurgessSecurityGovernment faces court over NHS Test and Trace privacy failingsBy Matt BurgessIdeasPrivacy Isn’t a Right You Can Click AwayBy Sherrod BrownSecurityHow to Get Safari's Privacy Features in Chrome and FirefoxBy David NieldSecurityIs It Legal for Cops to Force You to Unlock Your Phone?By Timothy B. Lee, Ars TechnicaSecurityGoogle Will Delete Your Data by Default—in 18 MonthsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityApple Pushes Back Against Ad Tracking in Safari and iOS 14By Lily Hay NewmanSecurityCompanies are enforcing their own contact tracing to track employeesBy Laura MillerSecurityZoom Promises End-to-End Encryption for All UsersBy Lily Hay NewmanIdeasFacebook Groups Are Destroying AmericaBy Nina Jankowicz and Cindy OtisSecurityHow To Stop Instagram From Tracking Everything You DoBy Matt BurgessSecurityHow to Clean Up Your Old Social Media PostsBy David NieldBusinessA Bill in Congress Would Limit Uses of Facial RecognitionBy Tom SimoniteBusinessThis startup is working to bring full anonymity to the internetBy Gian M. VolpicelliBusinessTwitter's Newest Trick Relies on Tracking Your ClicksBy Sidney FussellBusinessAmazon Pauses Police Use of Its Facial Recognition TechBy Louise MatsakisMore Stories