dataSecurityThe DHS Bought a ‘Shocking Amount’ of Phone-Tracking DataBy Ashley Belanger, Ars TechnicaIdeasWhat Germany's Lack of Race Data Means During a PandemicBy Edna BonhommeScienceSpotting Objects From Space Is Easy. This Challenge Is HarderBy Sarah ScolesIdeasDemocracy Is Asking Too Much of Its DataBy Dan BoukIdeasOne Day, AI Will Seem as Human as Anyone. What Then?By Joanna J. BrysonScienceHow Covid Tracking Apps Are Pivoting for Commercial ProfitBy Matt Reynolds and Morgan MeakerSecurityCops Will Be Able to Scan Your Fingerprints With a PhoneBy Matt BurgessScienceIt’s Hard to Do Climate Research When Your Glacier Is MeltingBy Jesse KleinIdeasLife Is Great in the Age of No SecretsBy Paul FordSecurityThe Tricky Business of Elon Musk Getting Twitter Fire-Hose AccessBy Chris Stokel-WalkerSecurityA Long-Awaited Defense Against Data Leaks May Have Just ArrivedBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessPeriod-Tracking and Fertility Apps Can Put Women Seeking Abortions at RiskBy Vittoria ElliottSecurityYour Tim Hortons Coffee App Knew Where You Were at All TimesBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaSecurityGoogle Urged to Stop Tracking Location Data Ahead of Roe ReversalBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaSecurity‘Tough to Forge’ Digital Driver’s Licenses Are—Yep—Easy to ForgeBy Dan Goodin, Ars TechnicaSecurityOpen Source Intelligence May Be Changing Old-School WarBy Alexa O'BrienSecurityHow GDPR Is FailingBy Matt BurgessBusinessThe US Plan to Document War Crimes in UkraineBy Vittoria ElliottSecurityIndia’s New Super App Has a Privacy ProblemBy Varsha BansalScienceWhen the Next Covid Wave Breaks, the US Won’t Be Able to Spot ItBy Maryn McKennaIdeasDo I Really Need to Back Up All My Data?By Meghan O'GieblynScienceMaking Science More Open Is a Potential Security RiskBy Grace BrowneSecurityRussia Is Leaking Data Like a SieveBy Matt BurgessSecurityThe Last Cell Tower in MariupolBy Matt BurgessMore Stories