The dark side of facial recognition technology
Lynch law, loss of basic privacy, disgusting marketing, digital identity theft — how else can facial recognition be misused?
750 articles
Lynch law, loss of basic privacy, disgusting marketing, digital identity theft — how else can facial recognition be misused?
If you own an Apple device, spend a few minutes setting up your System Location Services. You’ll protect your privacy and lengthen battery life.
Catching criminals, waking up a sleepy driver, stopping teens from buying cigarettes — facial recognition can help us accomplish all that and more.
Today, it seems everything can be hacked. Even your vibrator. This is the tale of developers of very intimate goods who do not value the privacy of their clients.
ProjectSauron is obviously a costly attack, but the budget is not invested in ‘rocket science’, but rather in the ‘bugfixing’ after the previous APT campaigns.
In the second part of our “Ask the expert” session, Jornt van der Wiel answers questions about encryption: how it works, what it is for, and more.
You could’ve asked our GReAT members whatever you wanted. Here are the best 6 questions and GReAT experts’ answers
Did you know that some apps on your iPhone or iPad track your location, access your camera and calendar, and more? In Part 1 of this story, we show you how to turn off tracking using iOS’s privacy features.
Everything you need to know about safe posting on any social network, boiled down to five crucial rules.
Accurate identification of people’s faces is a very human process but computers are gaining on our processing. A look at what’s going on now and what we’ll see soon.
Kaspersky Internet Security and Kaspersky Total Security can help protect your privacy in a variety of ways including not allowing your webcam to serve as a spying device.
Just took your new iPad out of the box? Here we explain how to make it more secure and easy to use
Your smartphone knows everything about you: whom you call and what messages you send, which websites you visit and what photos you take, including even when and where you do it. This data may be used against you.
Do you know how many companies are actually tracking you when you visit a single website? The answer may surprise you.
We’ve seen drones armed with chainsaws and guns. More alarming though is how easily they can be hacked.
We talk about ever-present connectivity. What does that mean for raising kids?
Aggressive moral crusaders search for porn actresses accounts on VK.com and cyberbully them along with their friends and families.
The Kaspersky Daily team checks if FindFace can really find users on a social media site with one image taken on the street and if it is possible to hide from it. Some interesting peculiarities detected!
How everyone and his dog online make the big data tyranny raise.
VPN’s features and pitfalls from legal and technical standpoint