For Gizmodo
Here's How California's Prop 24 Could Better—or Break—Our Privacy for Good
Facebook Says China Is Its Biggest Enemy, but It’s Also a Highly Valued Customer
The "Stop Hate For Profit" Movement Isn't Going to Stop Anything
Your Phone Is a Goldmine of Hidden Data for Cops. Here's How to Fight Back
Target Is Sponsoring News Stories of Its Own Destruction—And Likely Has No Idea
Apple and Google's Coronavirus Efforts Remind Us How Little Control We Have Over Our Health Data
Google's Fighting a Losing Battle Against Coronavirus Scammers
India's Mandated Contact-Tracing App Is An Invasive, Insecure Mess
Zoom Bombings Started Off as Pranks. Now Someone Could End Up Dead
On Google Search, Scammy Unemployment Ads Are Targeting Some of the Most Vulnerable People
Tinder's New Panic Button Is Sharing Your Data With Ad-Tech Companies
Twitter Borked Its Own Platform Trying to Fix Its Nazi Ad-Targeting Problem
For Adweek
An Inside Look Into How TikTok Could Attempt to Win Over Influencers
In Pursuit of Brand Safety, Queer Sites Are Caught in the Crossfire
Across Platforms, Politicians Face Scrutiny About Everything But Their Speech
YouTube’s Comments Section Is a Cesspool, but Advertisers Aren’t Going Anywhere
For Everyone Else
YouTube’s copyright strikes have become a tool for extortion (The Verge)
Twitter will lock your account if you change your display name to Elon Musk (The Verge)
Apple and Google haven’t banned Infowars apps, and their downloads are booming (The Verge)
It’s nonsense to suggest Gab is unfairly targeted for hate speech (The Washington Post)
Printer prank pushes 'PewDiePie' campaign — and points out security issue (NBC News)