An updated disclaimer for the useless mode comes after Google settled a $5 billion lawsuit over consumer privacy.
A week into phase one of Google’s cookie killing project in Chrome, early tests show how it could hit the web’s bottom line.
Catch up on the biggest tech stories from this week.
It’s the beginning of the end in Google’s plan to kill cookies forever.
Facebook introduces a confusing new setting as the walls close in on Zuckerberg’s data machine.
A location privacy change will end Google’s compliance with constitution-busting geofence warrants.
CMG Local Solutions claims its ads use “voice data” to target “the exact people you are looking for.”
The Meta CEO is making his holiday rounds with Threads' EU launch and a new AI tool for Instagram.
Google’s cookie-killing “Privacy Sandbox” project is finally set to begin.
The consumer DNA harvesting king exposed 6.9 million people’s data. We’ll never know exactly what goes wrong from here.
Senator Wyden wants to change privacy policies that allow Apple and Google to share metadata about their users with the government.
ExpressVPN now supports tvOS 17 and allows users to access servers in 105 countries.
For years, Tutanota (which recently rebranded to "Tuta") has been a trusted email provider. A former Canadian cop has accused it of being a honeypot.
The pin, which its creators want to sell you as a replacement for your smartphone, is still a bit of a black box.
The digital privacy experts at Incogni chart an actionable calendar for reclaiming your private information.
Two former Apple employees (and Sam Altman) promise their AI pin will revolutionize our relationships with the internet. But what is it?
For now, the subscription fee will cover all additional linked accounts, but Meta will charge for those extra profiles in the spring.
Apple has been caught, yet again, hawking a "privacy" feature that does not actually function.
It’s not exactly a VPN, and it will only work with Google-owned domains to start, but it could offer users more ways to hide their activity online.
Experts say the state's top court missed an opportunity to rein in the practice, which critics have attacked as an extreme digital dragnet.