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Latest by Maya Shwayder

The Amazon fulfillment center in Shakopee, Minnesota

Workers say Amazon lied about COVID-19 cases at Minnesota warehouse

Amazon workers allege bosses purposefully downplayed the presence of the COVID-19, at one point even playing videos to convince people there was no threat.
Hands on a laptop.

Massive ‘Blueleaks’ trove of law enforcement documents leaked

Thousands of U.S. police documents were leaked to the public in what’s being called “BlueLeaks” on Juneteenth. The data could contain private information.
Power Lines against a grey sky.

Major security vulnerability could leave critical infrastructure defenseless

A wide range of bugs in a software firms code — which is used by many devices across several industries — would allow hackers easy access to control the devices.
T-Mobile storefront with corporate signage.

T-Mobile goes down: What caused Monday’s outage

T-Mobile subscribers reported service outages across several cities in the United States on Monday. A routing issue has been blamed for knocking out service.
Jack Dorsey

Twitter CEO Jack Dorsey makes Juneteenth a company holiday

Juneteenth, which is celebrated as the day when slavery in the U.S. officially ended, will now be an official company holiday at tech giants Twitter and Square.
Hand holding a Twitter phone

Twitter bringing back verification, this time with clearer guidelines

Twitter will soon begin verifying users' accounts again, according to social media secret finder Jane Wong. Details of the new system haven't been announced.
protester

Researchers: Bots are spreading conspiracy theories about #blacklivesmatter

Almost half of the accounts tweeting about the BLM protests could be bots or cyborgs, according to experts, and they're spreading misinformation.
protester

Police facial recognition tech could misidentify people at protests, experts say

Facial recognition algorithms are notoriously bad at identifying non-white and non-male people. But the tech may still be used today as protests roil the U.S.
How to change your Spotify username

Music streaming services join #BlackoutTuesday to support protesters

Music services including Spotify, Apple Music, and YouTube Music are promoting the Blackout Tuesday movement to voice support for Black Lives Matter protesters.
Atlanta Protest Held In Response To Police Custody Death Of Minneapolis Man George Floyd

Protesters sharing tech tips to stay safe, avoid arrest amid U.S. unrest

Protesters and activists have been sharing advice for how to treat injuries, avoid police detection, and stay safe during demonstrations over police brutality.
Donald Trump

Trump threatens to shut down social media platforms

In response to a new Twitter feature that fact-checked the President for the first time, Trump tweeted a threat to shut down or regulate social media.
insecure flu cybersecurity hospital computer

Hackers are stepping up attacks on health care facilities and researchers

February to March 2020 saw almost a 50% increase in the number of cyberattacks on health care systems and hospitals in the U.S. The Red Cross says "no more."
Signal app

Vulnerability in Signal messaging app could let hackers track your location

A threat actor can see your rough location simply by calling you on Signal, whether you have them listed as a contact, and even if you don't pick up the phone.
Bee Homes

These customizable Ikea-like ‘homes’ hope to help save the bees

Bees all over the world face extinction; now Space10, the design firm behind Ikea, is launching an open-source design for people to create new homes for bees.
iPhone 11 Pro feature image

The FBI broke Apple’s iPhone encryption. Here’s why you shouldn’t panic

The FBI's iPhone hacks are cost-prohibitive, and it's unlikely the government would want to use these methods to spy on everyone, experts say.
Google's Logo

Google disputes report, says diversity programs aren’t being cut

Google has disputed an earlier report that the company had shut down its diversity training programs, telling Digital Trends the programs were still active.
U.S. Senator Ron Wyden speaks in Washington, D.C.

The Senate is OK with the government spying on your browser history

A tussle over new amendments to the 2001 Patriot Act has ended with the Senate failing to block an expansion of the power to surveil web browser history.
Elon Musk

California attorney general says he’s ‘ready to enforce’ lockdown as Tesla reopens

Xavier Becerra said he was "ready to enforce" the state's stay at home orders in the wake of Elon Musk flouting state rules and reopening his Tesla factory.
Amazon packages on a conveyer belt

Amazon’s $2-an-hour bonus pay for frontline workers will end in June

Amazon warehouse workers, who began making $17/hour in March, will revert to earning $15/hour in June. This is the second time Amazon has extended hazard pay.
Lin-Manuel-Miranda

Hamilton is headed to Disney+ more than a year ahead of schedule

A "live-capture" version of the Broadway musical Hamilton was slated for release in October 2021, but Disney+ has pushed up the release by more than 15 months.
Elon Musk

Elon Musk dares authorities to arrest him after reopening Tesla factory

Elon Musk reopened his Fremont factory, despite California's stay-at-home orders. Officials declared car manufacturing non-essential and said employees cannot work.
doctors gloved hands attaching a VitalPatch to a patient's chest

FDA clears heart monitor for coronavirus patients using hydroxychloroquine

A wearable patch can monitor a patient who has been treated for COVID with hydroxychloroquine, a drug that can cause serious, even deadly, heartbeat issues.
Northwestern University's wearable tracker

Wearable device can tell if your cough is the coronavirus

Researchers have developed the first wearable device that can track a person’s COVID-19 symptoms, possibly alerting health workers before you know you're sick.
quibi ceo

Quibi, JetBlue, and more leaked your email to advertisers, report finds

A researcher has found that dozens of companies have accidentally been leaking millions of user emails to the likes of Google, Snapchat, Facebook. and others.
Man sitting on rail as people walk by

The future of smart cities may mean the death of privacy

As smart cities evolve, cameras proliferate, and all of our data is continually collected, the question of how to maintain personal privacy becomes more urgent.
Google account security

Australia will force Facebook and Google to share ad revenue with local media

Australia will force Facebook and Google to share ad revenue with media companies -- one of the first times the companies will have to pay for content they use.
Pixel phone with five icon at the bottom of the display.

Google Drive’s new ‘Privacy Screen’ lets you lock the app behind Face ID

A new Google Drive feature — which allows users to lock the app with a passcode, Touch ID, or Face ID — will be rolling out this week, Google announced.
Bill Gates

Bill Gates slams Trump’s decision to stop funding the World Health Organization

Bill Gates denounced President Trump's decision to withhold U.S. funding from the World Health Organization, calling the move "as dangerous as it sounds."
Tik Tok

TikTok vows more secure connections after vulnerability found

After a security vulnerability was found that would let hackers swap fake videos into TikTok feeds, the company said it's rolling out more secure connections.
Amazon Prime Day packages

Amazon sellers are price-gouging on essential stay-at-home tech

Prices for work-from-home essentials like webcams, routers, and ethernet cables — and even entertainment products like Nintendo Switches — are far above normal.
Man working at a desk at home.

How to keep your data secure while working from home

What can you do to make sure your work data isn't stolen or leaked? We asked cybersecurity experts to share their tips to keep your information safe while home.
man working from home

‘A staggering problem’: Working from home could lead to massive data leaks

Working from home is far less secure than companies think it is, especially when few companies had plans in place to move their workforces online, experts say.
Ophelia Watahomigie-Corliss, a tribal councilwoman in Arizona, installs a hotspot at the bottom of a canyon.

As social distancing forces us online, rural America is being left behind

Social distancing has affected remote areas, where a lack of internet service makes videoconferencing software, telehealth services, and homework impossible.
amazon labor movement coronavirus composite getty 3

Coronavirus may bring a labor reckoning for Amazon

Pressure and scrutiny on Amazon's labor practices could lead to lasting change if workers seize the moment, experts and labor historians say.