Cameras in spaces like bathrooms have long been banned, but living room cameras were permitted.
Does surveillance tech help cops catch criminals? Not in NOLA, a new report from the city shows.
Artificial Intelligence cameras are heading to UK highways in the coming weeks to monitor drivers tossing trash out of their windows.
Israeli soldiers are using new invasive facial recognition tech to surveil Palestinians crossing military checkpoints, according to Amnesty International.
A human rights auditor hired by Hikvision expressed concerns over how the company's products were used to monitor Uyghur Muslims' religious sites.
A new Congressional bill, supported by 16 senators, would ban facial recognition and biometric tech for federal officials and pressure states to enact bans.
Newly unearthed papers show federal agencies testing facial recognition tools in subway cameras, street corners, and other public spaces.
Protect yourself from surveillance with clothes that block history's most invasive tech.
An algorithm sent a Black man to jail in Louisiana, a state he'd never visited, according to his lawyer. Experts say he won't be the last.
A massive report highlights fundamental problems with facial recognition and how police lie about its uses.
It's no secret we live in an expanding surveillance state, but here are some the places where government supervision is at its worst.
"If the city makes this high-stakes bet on casino surveillance, I worry they’ll gamble away the future of our public streets," said one privacy expert.
New York Governor Kathy Hochul announced a multi-million dollar initiative to install surveillance cameras in every train car.
Virginia's new law lets police use facial recognition if they have “reasonable suspicion" less than one year after the state banned police use of the tech.
Some U.S. cities are hitting the 'undo' button after efforts to prohibit the use of the technology.
Volunteers have mapped out more than 25,500 CCTV cameras spread out across the city. This is what that network would've captured at historic protests.
New statements from the company's CEO show it may use a more expansive facial recognition system than previously known.
This transition from the Nest app to the Google Home will be hard for those with old Nest cameras in their home.
But do you really want the Russian government to have a photo of your face?
You won't have access to an actual person for help unless you pay up.