- This Cute Chat Site Could Save Your Life and Help Overthrow Your Government
- How governments have tried to block Tor
- When It Comes to Human Rights, There Are No Online Security Shortcuts
- Wozniak: Web crackdown coming, freedom failing
- Europe's quixotic plan to "clean" the Internet of terrorists
- Korea Policing the Net. Twist? It's South Korea.--"As one of the world's most wired societies, South Korea has embraced the Web, but a recent crackdown on Internet freedom has drawn accusations of censorship." NYT
- Internet Blackout in Malaysia--"Malaysian netizens, opposition politicians, well-known bloggers and non-governmental organizations staged an Internet blackout Tuesday to protest and raise awareness about legislation that could threaten free expression on the Web."
- Homeland Security Issuing Its Own DMCA Takedowns On YouTube To Stifle Speech
- Universal Music Uses Bogus DMCA Claim To Take Down Negative Review Of Drake's Album
- Watch what you tweet: How online troll crackdowns threaten freedom of speech
- The U.S. Senate has blocked the Cybersecurity Act of 2012
- BlackBerry maker Research in Motion agrees to hand over its encryption keys to India
- Anonymous claims it hacked Australian spy agency--"It appeared linked to a controversial government plan to store the web history of all Australians for up to two years which was shelved Thursday until after the 2013 elections."
- Appeals court tosses warrantless wiretapping suit--"A federal appeals court has overturned a court decision awarding $40,800 in damages and $2.5 million in legal fees to an Islamic charity's lawyers who claimed they were illegally surveilled under President George W. Bush's warrantless wiretapping program."
- Appeals Court OKs Warrantless, Real-Time Mobile Phone Tracking--This "horrifyingly bad ruling" has been brought to you by a drug mule called "Big Foot."
- What Happens When Our Cellphones Can Predict Our Every Move?--"A team of British researchers has developed an algorithm that uses tracking data on people's phones to predict where they'll be in 24 hours. The average error: just 20 meters."
- Surprisingly Good Evidence That Real Name Policies Fail To Improve Comments
- Commenters Anonymous: Why Real Names Aren't the Answer
- Toward a more inclusive naming policy for Google+
- Germany: Facebook must destroy facial recognition database
- Facebook Abstainers could be labeled Suspicious
- 'Friends' can share your Facebook profile with the government, court rules
- Facebook and the ACLU tell court a "like" is protected speech
- Facebook looks to amp up ads in users' news feeds--"The social network is testing a new way for advertisers to reach users that involves placing unsolicited ads into users' news feeds regardless of any connection to the brand or product."
- Twitter hands over user data to NYPD after shooting threat tweet
- Apple holds the master decryption key when it comes to iCloud security, privacy
- Proposed Privacy Law Demands Court Warrants for Cloud Data
- "Privacy": Why it matters much more than you think--"A provocative new book places the right to be left alone at the center of a just society. Why do we give it away?" Salon
- Blast from the Past: Anonymity on the Internet Must be Protected