How the NFL—not the NSA—is impacting data gathering well beyond the gridiron
From the archives: Corporations watch the NFL using RFID tags to track player movements.
From the archives: Corporations watch the NFL using RFID tags to track player movements.
Latest ruling might require Google to remove Sci-Hub from search.
This column is my first step toward recovering from a maddening return experience.
Police: "It appears the suspects knew what they were looking for."
Nurse told officer to get a warrant. Cop grabs her and arrests her for no reason.
Ads bash Clinton before election and cap on Trump after he won the presidency.
Bug-bounty program would exempt participants from federal hacking laws.
Twitter: "We are committed to working every single day at solving this problem."
Appeals court says silencing online speech over trademark suit is unconstitutional.
Lawsuit says Facebook has a “systematic, companywide wrongful classification” system.
Feds: "Paddock removed the hard drive from the laptop after he opened fire."
Puffing e-cigarettes in public places is getting much harder to do.
“Congress has a constitutional duty to preserve the integrity of our justice system.”
"There was no indication that the cameras changed behavior at all."
Honest Ads Act requires Google, Twitter, Facebook to open ads to public review.
"Our cell phones are the best deterrent to ensure mistreatment becomes a rarity."
Equifax-IRS ordeal exposes the strangeness of the government contracting system.
Lawsuit claimed "google" had become synonymous with "search the Internet."
Feds claim legal right to reach into the world's servers with a valid US warrant.
Meanwhile, Trump continued attacks on NBC, media: "Sadly, they and others are Fake News."
During suspension, IRS says it will review "Equifax systems and security."
Fake account said police would offer abortions and anybody could become a recruit.
Apple sells "software distribution services to developers" who lease App Store space.
High court refuses to hear appeal of hacking conviction, one-year prison sentence.
Ad says, "I fought Planned Parenthood and we stopped the sale of baby body parts."
Yet again, Arizona Lottery investigates a glitch with a random number generator.
“It’s almost like a lynch mob is forming,” she says about the fallout from her post.
Unlike California taxi drivers, ride-hailing drivers don't have to be fingerprinted.
Man faces up to 3 years in prison, argued that the law was "patently illogical."
Court wants transparency “while preserving the integrity of its proceedings.”
"This is considered a critical service that cannot lapse."
US government is examining the use of a “modern cryptographic identifier.”
"The Court is now sitting"—with 100% more Gorsuch and plenty of tech questions ahead.
Judge agrees with FBI that national security trumps the public's right to know.
Gambler has no right to contest non-payment because casino is on tribal land.
Violators subject to “potential civil penalties and criminal charges.”