The platform has promised to do better after a string of incidents. But the hardest part might be managing user expectations.
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Author: Lily Hay Newman
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Lily Hay Newman has recently written 7 articles on similar topics including :
"After over a million downloads, the Tekya-infected Android offerings are finally on ice" . (March 24, 2020 )"Privacy advocates warn that the Ring Always Home Cam and Amazon One both normalize aggressive new forms of data collection" . (October 11, 2020 )"Just like foods that display health information the package, researchers are exploring a tool that details how connected devices manage data" . (June 9, 2020 )"All computers are completely shut down, one Universal Health Services employee told WIRED" . (September 28, 2020 )"CD Projekt Red's list of woes gets longer, as hackers claim to have stolen the source code for their most popular games" . (February 9, 2021 )"The new Manage Activity feature will let you archive and bulk delete posts for the first time" . (June 2, 2020 )"Better anti-tracking measures have become the norm for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and other modern browsers. But they still disagree on how exactly they should work" . (January 30, 2020 )
Posted on February 28, 2021 December 16, 2022 encryption , platforms , privacy , security , social media