Hannah Zhao writes: Police departments and law enforcement agencies are increasingly collecting personal information using drones, also known as unmanned aerial vehicles. In addition to high-resolution photographic and video cameras, police drones may be equipped with myriad spying payloads, such as live-video transmitters, thermal imaging, heat sensors, mapping technology, automated license plate readers, cell site…
National Public Data’s response to an opt-out request
Last night, DataBreaches received an alert from Experian Identity Works that my Social Security number had shown up in its dark web surveillance. There were three entries where it had shown up last week. All three related to the massive National Public Data breach and leak. But looking at the three entries, I noted that…
U.S. State Privacy Laws vs NIST Privacy Framework
Lizzy Hill writes: The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) Privacy Framework is a free online tool for organizations that can be used to measure privacy risk while protecting individuals’ privacy. The framework was created in 2020 in collaboration with both private and public sector stakeholders to be agnostic to any technology, sector, law,…
Microsoft security tools questioned for treating employees as threats
Thomas Claburn reports: Software designed to address legitimate business concerns about cyber security and compliance treats employees as threats, normalizing intrusive surveillance in the workplace, according to a report by Cracked Labs. The report, titled “Employees as Risks” – released today by the Vienna-based non-profit – explores software from Microsoft and formerly from Forcepoint – specifically…