- Creepy Spying System Revealed by Wikileaks, Which Then Gets Hit by a Massive Attack--After over a week of being over-DDoSed since it outed Trapwire, Wikileaks is back online.
- Trapwire surveillance linked to Anonymizer and transport smart cards
- TrapWire: What is it, and are you affected?
- If You See This Google Warning, Act Fast: Big Brother is Watching--"Google warnings may be related to the flame virus that traces and steals information stored on Bluetooth-enabled devices."
- FinFisher Spyware Reach Found On Five Continents: Report
- Double-Protected Bank Clients Tricked by $78M Crimeware Scam
- FTC Dings Google $22.5M in Safari Cookie Flap
- ICO "not ready" to probe cookie complaints
- Microsoft sticks to its guns, keeps Do Not Track on by default in IE10
- Quora tweaks controversial Views privacy setting
- Panopticlick: How Unique—and Trackable—is your browser?
- Future changes to Facebook privacy settings to be opt-in
- Is Facebook's Facial Recognition That Scary?--Or creepy?
- Judge Skeptical of Facebook 'Sponsored Stories' Privacy Settlement
- Facebook to shuttle all users to Timeline this fall
- Facebook Now Reveals Names of People Who View Photos Posted to Groups--"Facebook has rolled out a new feature that may make privacy-wary Internet users cringe. It's a link called "seen by" that shows up under photos posted to groups. The link reveals a box that shows exactly who has seen the photographs — timestamps and all."
- How Apple and Amazon Security Flaws Led to My Epic Hacking--"Had I been regularly backing up the data on my MacBook, I wouldn't have had to worry about losing more than a year's worth of photos, covering the entire lifespan of my daughter, or documents and e-mails that I had stored in no other location."
- Amazon Quietly Closes Security Hole After Journalist's Devastating Hack--But it's better to take the matter into your own hands.
- Dropbox gets hacked ... again
- Blizzard Entertainment Notifies Its Players of Unauthorized Access to Battle.net Account Information--Update your passwords.
- How a lying 'social engineer' hacked Wal-Mart