privacyIdeasTechnology Addiction Has Created a Self-Help TrapBy Gaia BernsteinSecurityThey Posted Porn on Twitter. German Authorities Called the CopsBy Matt BurgessSecurityThe TikTok Hearing Revealed That Congress Is the ProblemBy Dell CameronScienceA Nonprofit Wants Your DNA Data to Solve CrimesBy Emily MullinBusinessIf the US Bans TikTok, WeChat Might Be NextBy Amanda FlorianBusinessA US Agency Rejected Face Recognition—and Landed in Big TroubleBy Khari JohnsonSecurityThe TikTok CEO’s Face-Off With Congress Is DoomedBy Matt LasloCultureI Got Investigated by the Secret Service. Here's How to Not Be MeBy Sam FogelSecurityAI-Generated Voice Deepfakes Aren’t Scary Good—YetBy Lily Hay NewmanBusinessA Face Recognition Site Crawled the Web for Dead People’s PhotosBy Lydia MorrishSecurityHow a Catholic Group Doxed Gay PriestsBy Lily Hay Newman and Dhruv MehrotraSecurityA US Congressman Says the FBI Unlawfully Targeted HimBy Dell CameronSecurityThe FBI Just Admitted It Bought US Location DataBy Dell CameronSecurityHow Denmark’s Welfare State Became a Surveillance NightmareBy Gabriel GeigerSecurityInside the Suspicion MachineBy Dhruv Mehrotra, Justin-Casimir Braun, Eva Constantaras, and Gabriel GeigerGearWhat to Do When Your Boss Is Spying on YouBy Omar L. GallagaBusinessFace Recognition Software Led to His Arrest. It Was Dead WrongBy Khari JohnsonSecurityYou Can’t Trust App Developers’ Privacy Claims on Google PlayBy Lily Hay NewmanSecurityUS Border Protection Is Finally Able to Check E-Passport DataBy Lily Hay NewmanGearHow to Buy a Security Camera You Can TrustBy Simon HillSecurityNorth Korean Hackers Are Attacking US HospitalsBy Matt Burgess and Lily Hay NewmanSecurityThe FBI’s Most Controversial Surveillance Tool Is Under ThreatBy Dell CameronSecurityWant to Delete Your Twitter DMs? Good Luck With ThatBy Matt BurgessSecurityThe Political Theater Behind the Bipartisan Data Privacy PushBy Matt LasloMore Stories