The new privacy bill in California allows consumers to control what data companies collect from them and how that information is used.
Security veteran Chenxi Wang's new venture capital fund Rain Capital plans to focus on cloud-native security services and products. Rain Capital will also seek out female and minority founders solving challenging security problems.
A new data privacy act would allow consumers to stop companies from selling their personal data.
Twitter now supports the use of hardware security keys for two-factor authentication, a much stronger option for users.
WPA3 brings new security features to wireless networks, including better password security.
A new project from the EFF offers a quick path to a more secure email ecosystem.
In a 5-4 decision, the Supreme Court said law enforcement needs to obtain a search warrant before it can access historical cell phone location records, but stopped short of making a ruling on how other types of third-party data collection should be handled.
Google is incorporating a new biometric API into Android P to support the use of strong biometrics.
Three mobile carriers said they will no longer sell customer location data to aggregators.
Lawmakers are planning to introduce a privacy "bill of rights" that will include some elements of the new GDPR regulation.
A convenient feature in macOS called QuickLook can leak information about files that users preview, even in encrypted containers.
As nation-state actors increasingly target physical critical infrastructure, two federal agencies strategize on how to protect against national threats.
A bug from the 1990s allows attackers to spoof signatures on some encrypted emails in GnuPG and other tools.
A new bill would require the use of paper ballots and audits in all federal elections.
An issue with the way third-party tools implement Apple's code-signing API can allow malicious files to pass as legitimate ones.