GPS trackers: Cyberpoaching paradise
How tools designed to study and protect rare species can turn from gamekeeper to poacher.
83 articles
How tools designed to study and protect rare species can turn from gamekeeper to poacher.
We investigate intercepting smartwatch motion-sensor data to monitor people and steal information.
Everyone is used to seeing targeted ads on the Internet. Now ads employing the same principles are emerging offline.
Cameras in buildings, public areas, and even at home spy on us without our knowledge or consent. What can we do about it?
The tracking tools used by digital marketers are so ubiquitous that it’s really hard to avoid mass Web surveillance. However, our Private Browsing can help you protect your privacy.
If you own an Apple device, spend a few minutes setting up your System Location Services. You’ll protect your privacy and lengthen battery life.
Did you know that some apps on your iPhone or iPad track your location, access your camera and calendar, and more? In Part 1 of this story, we show you how to turn off tracking using iOS’s privacy features.
Do you know how many companies are actually tracking you when you visit a single website? The answer may surprise you.
Three most important recent news with extensive commentary and trolling: nasty Android Stagefright vulnerability, new car hacks and Do Not Track 2.0 privacy initiative
Flightradar24 allows you to track what’s happening to any particular aircraft taking a family member or friend to their destination. Let’s find out how this service works.
Find out about the most interesting gadgets presented at the Mobile World Congress 2015 in Barcelona
There is a flood of appliances which could be connected – and some are connected – without a second thought as to whether or not it’s necessary or secure.
The Internet continues to find its way into the private lives of its users. Here, we brief you on the most common methods of online tracking.
CES 2015 was a superb event in terms of the amount of new technology per square foot. But, from an information security standpoint, it did not appear all that positive.
Today, users are readily spending their money on house arrest-style services similar to those used for tracking criminals. They call them fitness trackers.
Malvertising is an ambiguous term referring to malicious online advertisements; some cause malware infection while others track user behavior.
Online behavior tracking by Web advertisement agencies attempting to better target consumers with products and other ads is a pervasive, persistent, and contentious practice on the Internet. The ad firms