privacyBusinessFacebook Bug Could Let Advertisers Get Your Phone NumberBy Tom SimoniteSecurityLet's make this the year we reclaim control of our dataBy Jon CrowcroftSecurityCongress Is Debating Mass Surveillance in the DarkBy Louise MatsakisSecuritySnowden's New App Turns Phones Into Home Security SystemsBy Andy GreenbergThe Big StorySecrecy Is Dead. Here's What Happens Next.By Alexis Sobel FittsCultureAm I The Worst For Looking at People's Texts on the Subway?By Jon MooallemGearHow Email Open Tracking Quietly Took Over the WebBy Brian MerchantSecurityWhat to Do if You’re Being DoxedBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityPhysical Measures to Amp Up Your Digital SecurityBy WIRED StaffSecurityHow to Sweep For Bugs and Hidden CamerasBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityExtreme Security Measures for the Extra ParanoidBy WIRED StaffSecurityAmazon Key Flaw Lets Deliverymen Disable Your CameraBy Andy GreenbergSecurityHow to Lock Down Your Facebook Privacy SettingsBy Brian BarrettSecurityFacebook's Not Listening From Your Phone. It Doesn’t Have ToBy Antonio García MartínezSecurityChrome Will Stop Sketchy Sites From Bouncing You to AdsBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityCheck These iOS 11 Privacy and Security Settings Right NowBy Brian BarrettBusinessSupreme Court's Cell Phone Tracking Case Could Hurt PrivacyBy Nick SibillaGearAmazon Key Puts Deliveries—And Delivery People—In Your HomeBy Brian BarrettThe Big StoryBig data meets Big Brother as China moves to rate its citizensBy Rachel BotsmanSecurityGoogle's 'Advanced Protection' Locks Down Accounts Like Never BeforeBy Andy GreenbergBusinessThe giant Piccadilly billboard is going to track cars to target adsBy Matt ReynoldsSecurityFeds Monitoring Social Media Does More Harm Than GoodBy Lily Hay NewmanSecuritySignal Has a Fix for Apps' Contact-Leaking ProblemBy Andy GreenbergSecurityThe colossal Equifax data breach has hit 400,000 UK customersBy Matt BurgessMore Stories