News - subcat

Zuckerberg ducks another courtroom grilling
Published in News


Meta settles shareholder privacy suit without answers

Mark Zuckerberg and a group of past and present Meta bosses have wriggled out of an ugly $8 billion privacy trial, cutting a last-minute deal before the second day of testimony.

Meta bosses in Delaware court
Published in News
Monday, 14 July 2025 08:56

Meta bosses in Delaware court


Shareholder lawsuit challenges board oversight

Meta bigwigs are heading to a Delaware courtroom this week as minority investors target the board over privacy failures that led to billions in sanctions.

Mark Klein has died
Published in News
Thursday, 13 March 2025 10:51

Mark Klein has died


The unlikely hero who stood up to the government

Mark Klein, the AT&T technician who blew the whistle on one of the most extensive illegal surveillance operations in American history, has died. He was 79.

Apple fanboys ignore its privacy stand
Published in News
Thursday, 27 February 2025 10:13

Apple fanboys ignore its privacy stand


Throwing toys out of the pram did not benefit the company

Fruity cargo cult Apple’s throwing its toys out of the pram over the British government’s insistence that it provide spooks with a back door has backfired because Apple fanboys don’t give monkey's.

Mozilla continues Onerep partnership despite privacy concerns
Published in News


Red Panda can’t find friends

Big cheeses at the Mozzarella Foundation are still promoting the personal data removal service Onerep to Firefox users nearly a year after announcing it would wind down its partnership with the outfit.

Apple speaks after paying out on privacy lawsuit
Published in News


We still did nothing wrong, it was broke when we got there

The fruity cargo cult Apple has taken the rare step of speaking to the media after paying out millions of dollars to settle a privacy lawsuit.

Microsoft scrambles to fix Copilot's privacy blunder
Published in News


A little too much oversharing

Microsoft's Copilot tool has inadvertently allowed customers to access sensitive information, including CEO emails and HR documents.

Smart TV’s are a digital trojan horse
Published in News
Tuesday, 08 October 2024 11:05

Smart TV’s are a digital trojan horse


Centre for Digital Democracy complains

The companies driving the streaming industry, including manufacturers of smart TVs and streaming sticks, as well as streaming service providers, have established a “surveillance system” that has “long undermined privacy and consumer protection,”

EU wallops Facebook’s data retention policies
Published in News


Zuckerberg can’t use your lunch pictures forever

The European Union's top court ruled on Friday that social networks like Facebook cannot indefinitely use people's information for ad targeting.

Google pays to make privacy case go away
Published in News


Writes $39.9 million cheque

Google will pay Washington State $39.9 million to resolve a lawsuit accusing the Alphabet unit of misleading consumers about its location tracking practices.