The Central Asian country’s government has repeatedly threatened to monitor its citizens’ internet activities. Google and Mozilla aren’t having it.
Original article
Author: Wired
View all posts by Wired
Wired has recently written 10 articles on similar topics including :
"Ad trackers are out of control. Use a browser that reins them in" . (June 16, 2019 )"The Facebook CEO chatted with WIRED's editor in chief about building a "privacy-focused" social network and the trade-offs he’ll need to make" . (March 7, 2019 )"Who needs the dark web? Researchers found 74 groups offering stolen credit cards and hacking tools by conducting simple Facebook searches" . (April 5, 2019 )"On Wednesday, Mark Zuckerberg laid out a vision for a very different Facebook—with a lot of unknowns about how to get there" . (March 7, 2019 )"WIRED senior writer Nitasha Tiku dives deep into her September cover story about internal turmoil at Google, the so-called happiest company in tech" . (August 16, 2019 )"The social network kept hundreds of millions of user passwords unscrambled, and employees could search them" . (March 21, 2019 )"For the past four years, Facebook has quietly used a homegrown tool called Zoncolan to find bugs in its massive codebase" . (August 17, 2019 )"Hey Google, is this the future of passive-aggressive exchanges at home?" . (August 15, 2019 )"Roger McNamee was a mentor to Mark Zuckerberg and an early investor in Facebook" . (March 11, 2019 )"The TajMahal spyware includes more than 80 distinct spy tools, and went undetected for five years" . (April 10, 2019 )
Posted on August 21, 2019 December 2, 2022 chrome , firefox , google , privacy , security , surveillance