Wired · Microsoft · Google · FBI · U.S. · FTC · Wired
A WIRED investigation this week found that a former Phoenix police officer who owns a company that offers firearms training
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The Take It Down Act went into effect in the United States this week, allowing people to demand that websites and other platforms remove their nonconsensual nudes.
Key facts
- First reported by 404 Media, recently published procurement records for the FBI Directorate of Intelligence show the agency gearing up to pay millions for access to data captured by roadside ALPR data
- The flaw was originally reported to the company 42 months ago by independent researcher Lyra Rebane, who initially assumed Wednesday's posting to the project's bug tracker meant a patch had finally
- Finally, as the Trump administration and US tech companies have grown increasingly intertwined, European nations are looking for US-free alternatives, with France leading the charge
- The Take It Down Act went into effect in the United States this week, allowing people to demand that websites and other platforms remove their nonconsensual nudes
Summary
A WIRED investigation this week found that a former Phoenix police officer who owns a company that offers firearms training to Immigration and Customs enforcement was involved in six shootings, four of which were deadly. The Federal Trade Commission this week announced a settlement with three marketing firms—not because they sold “Active Listening” technology for serving targeted advertising, but because the technology allegedly did not work. A bipartisan pair of US lawmakers this week took an initial stab at cracking down on automatic license plate readers, or ALPRs. GitHub, the popular Microsoft-owned code repository, suffered a data breach this week.