Privacy Month Part 3: Nothing To Hide
The reality is that we all have things to hide; not because we’re guilty of any crime but rather because there are parts of our lives — whether intimate or embarrassing — we prefer to keep private. Our privacy should be valued...
Privacy Month Part 1: A Decade of Snowden
This week marks the ten year anniversary of Edward Snowden blowing the whistle on the many crimes and abuses by the U.S. intelligence community.
Why Police License Plate Readers Might be Illegal
Although a Supreme Court ruling is not imminent, the dangers associated with data collection raised by the mosaic theory should give policy makers reason to strengthen — not weaken — guardrails surrounding the acquisition and use...
Open Sourced AI Imaging: Don’t Forget About Ethics
As the capabilities of AI imaging continue to be pushed and big tech companies begin launching new systems, it is vital that platform creators and tech industry experts consider the issue of ethics in the nature of open sourcing...
The Flawed Premises of Intensive Big Tech Regulation
The future of private governance in the tech industry is looking grim. However, as EU official Gerard de Graaf put it, “Negotiations are over, [and] we’re in a compliance situation. You may not like it, but that’s the way it is.”
SB 152: Restrictions on Social Media Use by Minors
This bill requires social media companies to identify Utah children on the platform by collecting and storing each child’s birthdate and their parent’s address