Companies like Apple want "the reputation that they protect users' data and they will do so at the expense of their relationship with law enforcement,â but they also want to tap the multi-billion-dollar police tech market, EFFâs @mguariglia.bsky.social@forbes.com.
At Appleâs secretive Global Police Summit, cops from 7 countries learned how to use Apple products like the iPhone, Vision Pro and CarPlay for surveillance and policing.
You can browse and purchase NFTs from a Samsung TV.
I bought a tv last year, to have it ask me if I wanted to set my screen-saver to an NFT. www.samsung.com/nz/support/t...
FAQ for Samsung Television. Find more about introducing the Samsung NFT Platform for your Samsung TV with Samsung Support.
That recent Firefox zero-day was used to target Tor Browser users blog.torproject.org/new-release-...
This release is an emergency release to fix a critical security vulnerability in Tor Browser.
Mobility as a Service, IRL edition: Fisker EVs "cannot, as a technical matter, be 'ported' from the Fisker server to which the vehicles are currently linked to a distinct server owned and/or controlled by" a non-bankrupt vehicle operator. Tbh, this is just an early example for connected cars.
The sale of 3,300 Fisker Oceans is now in doubt as they cannot be migrated away from Fiskerâs server.
Breaking encryption kills journalists.
Oh? You think it's a good idea to break encryption because all governments are so trust-worthy? Surely a system like that would never get hacked? www.reuters.com/technology/c...
Chinese hackers accessed the networks of U.S. broadband providers and obtained information from systems the federal government uses for court-authorized wiretapping, the Wall Street Journal reported on Saturday.