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WIRED
What to Look for When Buying a Security Camera (2023): Tips and Risks
By
Simon Hill
β February 15
th
2023 at 12:00
Eufy's recent scandal shows it's not so much about the data breach but about how a company responds. Here are a few ways to shop smart.
WIRED
Enter the Hunter Satellites Preparing for Space War
By
Mark Harris
β February 1
st
2023 at 12:00
True Anomaly, a startup backed by US senator JD Vance's VC firm, plans to launch prototype pursuit satellites on a SpaceX flight later this year.
WIRED
January 6 Report: 11 Details You May Have Missed
By
Garrett M. Graff
β January 6
th
2023 at 12:00
The January 6 Committeeβs 841-page report will go down as one of the most important documents in US history. These key details stand out.
WIRED
If Musk Starts Firing Twitter's Security Team, Run
By
Lily Hay Newman
β October 28
th
2022 at 22:55
What's next for the social network is anyone's guessβbut here's what to watch as you wade through the privacy and security morass.
WIRED
How Vice Society Got Away With a Global Ransomware Spree
By
Lily Hay Newman
β October 20
th
2022 at 11:00
Vice Society has a superpower thatβs allowed it to quietly carry out attacks on schools and hospitals around the world: mediocrity.
WIRED
VPN Providers Flee India as a New Data Law Takes Hold
By
Varsha Bansal
β September 25
th
2022 at 11:00
Many companies have pulled physical servers from the country as a mandate to collect customer data goes into effect.
WIRED
The Shaky Future of a Post-Roe Federal Privacy Law
By
Matt Laslo
β September 15
th
2022 at 11:00
The American Data Privacy and Protection Act could protect people across the country. But first, it has to get past Nancy Pelosi.
WIRED
Inside the Worldβs Biggest Hacker Rickroll
By
Matt Burgess
β August 22
nd
2022 at 11:00
As a graduation prank, four high school students hijacked 500 screens across six school buildings to troll their classmates and teachers.
WIRED
The Low Threshold for Face Recognition in New Delhi
By
Varsha Bansal
β August 21
st
2022 at 11:00
Police in India's capital say they only require an 80 percent accuracy rate for matches, raising new alarm bells for civil liberty advocates.
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