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☐ ☆ ✇ WIRED

Elon Musk’s DOGE Is Being Sued Under the Privacy Act: What to Know

By: Eric Geller — February 18th 2025 at 21:50
At least eight ongoing lawsuits related to the so-called Department of Government Efficiency’s alleged access to sensitive data hinge on the Watergate-inspired Privacy Act of 1974. But it’s not airtight.
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Top US Election Security Watchdog Forced to Stop Election Security Work

By: Eric Geller — February 15th 2025 at 03:07
The US Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency has frozen efforts to aid states in securing elections, according to an internal memo viewed by WIRED.
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US Funding Cuts Are Helping Criminals Get Away With Child Abuse and Human Trafficking

By: Matt Burgess — February 10th 2025 at 17:47
Services supporting victims of online child exploitation and trafficking around the world have faced USAID and State Department cuts—and children are suffering as a result, sources tell WIRED.
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The Collapse of USAID Is Already Fueling Human Trafficking and Slavery at Scammer Compounds

By: Matt Burgess, Lily Hay Newman — February 5th 2025 at 17:33
The dismantling of USAID by Elon Musk's DOGE and a State Department funding freeze have severely disrupted efforts to help people escape forced labor camps run by criminal scammers.
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Biden's Cyber Ambassador Urges Trump Not to Cede Ground to Russia and China in Global Tech Fight

By: Eric Geller — January 16th 2025 at 11:30
Nathaniel Fick, the ambassador for cyberspace and digital policy, has led US tech diplomacy amid a rising tide of pressure from authoritarian regimes. Will the Trump administration undo that work?
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A New Jam-Packed Biden Executive Order Tackles Cybersecurity, AI, and More

By: Eric Geller — January 16th 2025 at 10:30
US president Joe Biden just issued a 40-page executive order that aims to bolster federal cybersecurity protections, directs government use of AI—and takes a swipe at Microsoft’s dominance.
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How the US TikTok Ban Would Actually Work

By: Matt Burgess — January 9th 2025 at 19:46
The fate of TikTok now rests in the hands of the US Supreme Court. If a law banning the social video app this month is upheld, it won’t disappear from your phone—but it will get messy fast.
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Californians Say X Blocked Them From Viewing Amber Alert About Missing 14-Year-Old

By: Kate Knibbs — January 3rd 2025 at 15:36
Many people reported they hit a screen preventing them from seeing the alert unless they signed in.
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FTC Says Data Brokers Unlawfully Tracked Protesters and US Military Personnel

By: Dell Cameron, Dhruv Mehrotra — December 3rd 2024 at 19:18
The FTC is targeting data brokers that monitored people’s movements during protests and around US military installations. But signs suggest the Trump administration will be far more lenient.
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Top US Consumer Watchdog Has a Plan to Fight Predatory Data Brokers

By: Dell Cameron, Andrew Couts — December 3rd 2024 at 13:00
A new proposal by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau would use a 54-year-old privacy law to impose new oversight of the data broker industry. But first, the agency must survive Elon Musk.
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Anyone Can Buy Data Tracking US Soldiers and Spies to Nuclear Vaults and Brothels in Germany

By: Dhruv Mehrotra, Dell Cameron — November 20th 2024 at 04:00
More than 3 billion phone coordinates collected by a US data broker expose the detailed movements of US military and intelligence workers in Germany—and the Pentagon is powerless to stop it.
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Immigration Police Can Already Sidestep US Sanctuary City Laws Using Data-Sharing Fusion Centers

By: Lily Hay Newman — November 19th 2024 at 10:00
Built to combat terrorism, fusion centers give US Immigration and Customs Enforcement a way to gain access to data that’s meant to be protected under city laws limiting local police cooperation with ICE.
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More Spyware, Fewer Rules: What Trump’s Return Means for US Cybersecurity

By: Eric Geller — November 14th 2024 at 10:30
Experts expect Donald Trump’s next administration to relax cybersecurity rules on businesses, abandon concerns around human rights, and take an aggressive stance against the cyber armies of US adversaries.
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A Trump Win Could Unleash Dangerous AI

By: Eric Geller — October 21st 2024 at 10:30
Donald Trump's opposition to “woke” safety standards for artificial intelligence would likely mean the dismantling of regulations that protect Americans from misinformation, discrimination, and worse.
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Surprise! The Latest ‘Comprehensive’ US Privacy Bill Is Doomed

By: Dell Cameron — June 27th 2024 at 15:55
Gutted of civil rights protections by Democrats to woo pro-business Republicans, the American Privacy Rights Act was pulled from a key congressional hearing—and appears unlikely to receive a full vote.
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Secrecy Concerns Mount Over Spy Powers Targeting US Data Centers

By: Dell Cameron — May 14th 2024 at 16:16
A coalition of digital rights groups is demanding the US declassify records that would clarify just how expansive a major surveillance program really is.
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The Next US President Will Have Troubling New Surveillance Powers

By: Dell Cameron — April 22nd 2024 at 16:59
Over the weekend, President Joe Biden signed legislation not only reauthorizing a major FISA spy program but expanding it in ways that could have major implications for privacy rights in the US.
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Big Tech Says Spy Bill Turns Its Workers Into Informants

By: Dell Cameron — April 17th 2024 at 18:11
One of Silicon Valley’s most influential lobbying arms joins privacy reformers in a fight against the Biden administration–backed expansion of a major US surveillance program.
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US Senate to Vote on a Wiretap Bill That Critics Call ‘Stasi-Like’

By: Dell Cameron — April 16th 2024 at 17:02
A controversial bill reauthorizing the Section 702 spy program may force whole new categories of businesses to eavesdrop on the US government’s behalf, including on fellow Americans.
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House Votes to Extend—and Expand—a Major US Spy Program

By: Dell Cameron — April 12th 2024 at 19:30
The US House of Representatives voted on Friday to extend the Section 702 spy program. It passed without an amendment that would have required the FBI to obtain a warrant to access Americans’ information.
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Trump Loyalists Kill Vote on US Wiretap Program

By: Dell Cameron — April 10th 2024 at 20:15
An attempt to reauthorize Section 702, the so-called crown jewel of US spy powers, failed for a third time in the House of Representatives after former president Donald Trump criticized the law.
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Section 702: The Future of the Biggest US Spy Program Hangs in the Balance

— April 9th 2024 at 20:21
The US Congress will this week decide the fate of Section 702, a major surveillance program that will soon expire if lawmakers do not act. WIRED is tracking the major developments as they unfold.
☐ ☆ ✇ WIRED

A Breakthrough Online Privacy Proposal Hits Congress

By: Makena Kelly — April 7th 2024 at 21:13
While some states have made data privacy gains, the US has so far been unable to implement protections at a federal level. A new bipartisan proposal called APRA could break the impasse.
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Sinking Section 702 Wiretap Program Offered One Last Lifeboat

By: Dell Cameron — March 15th 2024 at 17:25
For months, US lawmakers have examined every side of a historic surveillance debate. With the introduction of the SAFE Act, all that’s left to do now is vote.
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The ‘Emergency Powers’ Risk of a Second Trump Presidency

By: Thor Benson — March 13th 2024 at 17:42
Every US president has the ability to invoke “emergency powers” that could give an authoritarian leader the ability to censor the internet, restrict travel, and more.
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US Lawmaker Cited NYC Protests in a Defense of Warrantless Spying

By: Dell Cameron — March 12th 2024 at 19:14
A closed-door presentation for House lawmakers late last year portrayed American anti-war protesters as having possible ties to Hamas in an effort to kill privacy reforms to a major US spy program.
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Biden Executive Order Bans Sale of US Data to China, Russia. Good Luck

By: Dell Cameron — February 28th 2024 at 19:23
The White House issued an executive order on Wednesday that aims to prevent the sale of Americans' data to “countries of concern,” including China and Russia. Its effectiveness may vary.
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How a Right-Wing Controversy Could Sabotage US Election Security

By: Eric Geller — February 26th 2024 at 13:00
Republicans who run elections are split over whether to keep working with the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency to fight hackers, online falsehoods, and polling-place threats.
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Anne Neuberger, a Top White House Cyber Official, Sees the 'Promise and Peril' in AI

By: Garrett M. Graff — February 21st 2024 at 12:00
Anne Neuberger, the Biden administration’s deputy national security adviser for cyber, tells WIRED about emerging cybersecurity threats—and what the US plans to do about them.
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Leak of Russian ‘Threat’ Part of a Bid to Kill US Surveillance Reform, Sources Say

By: Dell Cameron — February 16th 2024 at 20:30
A surprise disclosure of a national security threat by the House Intelligence chair was part of an effort to block legislation that aimed to limit cops and spies from buying Americans' private data.
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Section 702 Surveillance Fight Pits the White House Opposite Reproductive Rights

By: Dell Cameron, Andrew Couts — February 14th 2024 at 16:05
Prominent advocates for the rights of pregnant people are urging members of Congress to support legislation that would ban warrantless access to sensitive data as the White House fights against it.
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A Backroom Deal Looms Over Section 702 Surveillance Fight

By: Dell Cameron — February 12th 2024 at 19:15
Top congressional lawmakers are meeting in private to discuss the future of a widely unpopular surveillance program, worrying members devoted to reforming Section 702.
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Congress Sure Made a Lot of Noise About Kids’ Privacy in 2023—and Not Much Else

By: Matt Laslo — December 22nd 2023 at 12:00
Members of the US Congress touted improvements to children’s privacy protections as an urgent priority. So why didn’t they do anything about it?
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Congress Clashes Over the Future of America’s Section 702 Spy Program

By: Dell Cameron — December 11th 2023 at 20:20
Competing bills moving through the House of Representatives both reauthorize Section 702 surveillance—but they pave very different paths forward for Americans’ privacy and civil liberties.
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US Lawmakers Want to Use a Powerful Spy Tool on Immigrants and Their Families

By: Dell Cameron — December 4th 2023 at 14:52
Legislation set to be introduced in Congress this week would extend Section 702 surveillance of people applying for green cards, asylum, and some visas—subjecting loved ones to similar intrusions.
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The CDC's Gun Violence Research Is in Danger

By: Matt Laslo — November 30th 2023 at 12:00
In a year pocked with fights over US government funding, Republicans are quietly trying to strip the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention of its ability to research gun violence.
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A Civil Rights Firestorm Erupts Around a Looming Surveillance Power Grab

By: Dell Cameron — November 28th 2023 at 20:03
Dozens of advocacy groups are pressuring the US Congress to abandon plans to ram through the renewal of a controversial surveillance program that they say poses an “alarming threat to civil rights.”
☐ ☆ ✇ WIRED

Section 702 Surveillance Reauthorization May Get Slipped Into ‘Must-Pass’ NDAA

By: Dell Cameron — November 27th 2023 at 20:27
Congressional leaders are discussing ways to reauthorize Section 702 surveillance, including by attaching it to the National Defense Authorization Act, Capitol Hill sources tell WIRED.
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