Zoom 5 moves toward security
Zoom developers have made their service more secure. We review what’s changed.
478 articles
Zoom developers have made their service more secure. We review what’s changed.
Dave and Jeff discuss how to keep personal data safe while protesting, the kerfuffle around NHS coronavirus texts, and more.
Your parents brought you into the digital world. Time to return the favor and raise them right as well.
Hiding your guilty pleasures from prying eyes is possible, but you need to do it properly.
Tools and approaches to help you get some online privacy.
We explain how to hide private data in images properly, without making rookie mistakes.
Dave and Jeff discuss privacy with Marco Preuss, the latest on Zoom, burning 5G down in the UK, and more.
In this episode, Dave and Jeff sit down with Kristina Shingareva to discuss the stalkerware problem.
Learn how to protect your Twitch account, block spammers and haters, and make chat easy and secure.
Dave and Jeff discuss scammers’ use of coronavirus, facial recognition on college campuses, Comcast leaking unlisted contact details of 200,000 customers, and more.
How APTs compromise the privacy and security of average citizens that they do not target directly.
Listen to your cookies with the Listening Back browser extension to understand the real scale of Web tracking.
We tell you which security and privacy settings will hold Twitter hackers and spammers at bay.
We reveal the best settings for protecting your profile from hackers, haters, and spammers.
Setting up your child’s first smartphone right will help keep them safe — and save you money.
Privacy International talks about period-tracking apps and the perils of sharing secrets with apps.
Twitter has taken actions to prevent attacks with strobing images on people with epilepsy. Are these actions sufficient?
How paranoid employers and jealous partners can spy on you, and why chip bags are best left to movie heroes.
On this podcast, Dave and Jeff address a ransomware attack in New Orleans, Facebook data stolen from a car, favorite Christmas movies, and more.
We examine the workings of emotion-recognition technologies, their usefulness, and the privacy concerns they inspire.