RegulationBusinessThe Supreme Court Accidentally Spurred a Data Privacy PushBy Steven LevyBusinessCrypto Is Straining the Power Grid. Congress Wants to Rein It InBy Ashley Belanger, Ars TechnicaIdeas‘Clean Slate’ Justice Laws Offer a Second Chance—Only to SomeBy Sarah Esther LagesonIdeasEurope's Big Tech Law Is Approved. Now Comes the Hard PartBy Asha AllenBusinessCrypto’s Free Rein May Be Coming to a CloseBy Gian M. VolpicelliIdeasTransport Apps Promised to Eliminate Friction. But at What Cost?By Paris MarxBusinessChina Is Tightening Its Grip on Big TechBy Chris Stokel-WalkerCultureHas the US Learned Nothing From the UK’s Gambling Woes?By Will BedingfieldBusinessBig Tech Has Become a Creature of the SwampBy Steven LevyIdeasThis Is the Internet That Socialists WantBy Gilad EdelmanSecurityThe Fight Against Robocall Spam and Scams Heats Up in IndiaBy Varsha BansalSecurityHow GDPR Is FailingBy Matt BurgessBusinessA ‘Radical’ Ruling Lets Texas Ban Social Media ModerationBy Jon Brodkin, Ars TechnicaIdeasThe Web3 Decentralization Debate Is Focused on the Wrong QuestionBy WIRED IdeasBusinessThe Fall of Roe Would Put Big Tech in a BindBy Vittoria ElliottIdeasThe EU's Opaque Policy-Making Has Never Been ClearerBy Asha AllenIdeasOn China, US National Security Experts Fear the Wrong ThingBy Sam Bresnick and Nathaniel SherBusinessUkraine War Prompts Europe's New Emergency Rules for the InternetBy Morgan MeakerSecurityThe US Saw a Spike in Child Sexual Abuse URLs in 2021By Matt BurgessIdeasHow the Battle Over a Pesticide Led to Scientific SkepticismBy Elena ConisBusinessWashington State Passed a Contentious New Gig Worker LawBy Aarian MarshallSecurityForcing WhatsApp and iMessage to Work Together Is Doomed to FailBy Matt BurgessBusinessNew York Taxi Drivers Hated Uber. Now They’re Going to Help ItBy Aarian MarshallBusinessEurope's Digital Markets Act Takes a Hammer to Big TechBy Morgan MeakerMore Stories