To get unbanned, Italian regulators said OpenAI must adopt a series of measures to protect users' privacy.
Italy's privacy regulator says there is no legal basis that justifies OpenAI’s collection and mass storage of personal data to train ChatGPT.
People noticed when Discord quietly removed privacy promises as it announced AI integrations. Then Discord added them back.
Ring customer service dismissed reporting about serious privacy issues. Amazon blames the claim on a rogue employee's "misunderstanding."
A new bill in the Senate wants to finally make some rules about how companies spy on you.
After fining GoodRx for the same offense, the Federal Trade Commission continues its crackdown on health privacy violators with BetterHelp.
A Mozilla study calls Google's app labels "a joke" and "useless," with loopholes so big you might be better off if you don't read them at all.
A new study finds data brokers selling lists of people with anxiety, depression, PTSD, and more for as little as $0.20.
Your medical information is a hot commodity. Hospitals and health apps aren't keeping it secret. Can you do something about it?
The mega-popular AI chatbot, trained on 300 billion online words, is a personal privacy nightmare, writes University of Sydney professor Uri Gal.
A settlement over GoodRx sharing info with Google and Facebook is poised to be a sea change for health data.
In addition to a fine, GoodRx has agreed to a first-of-its-kind provision banning the company from sharing health data with third parties for ads.
FullThrottle is launching a new, souped-up tracker as Google moves to kill third-party cookies.
Foot Locker has been keeping tabs on your conversations about your feet, according to the latest in a string of lawsuits attempting to curb data harvesting.
Chick-fil-A violated one of the US' only federal privacy laws by sharing video viewership data with Facebook, according to a new lawsuit.
The Commerce Department is inviting comments on how the problems of data harvesting worsen structural inequality.
European Union regulators say the tech industry, starting with Facebook's parent, needs to get real consent before it slurps up your data.
In 2023 you're going to see more advertising than ever thanks to an escalating battle between Apple, Google and Facebook.
New rules set to take effect on January 10 will require individuals to obtain a person's consent before using tech to edit their voice or image.
EU privacy regulators declared that Meta can't force users to agree to data collection.