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bread presidents
@breadpresidents.bsky.social
Citizen. Humanitarian. Data protector. Resister.
Reposted by bread presidents
“Do LinkedIn users understand how their data is getting used and what’s going to happen with it, and what protections they do and do not have under LinkedIn’s own terms of service?” EFF’s Corynne McSherry mused to @bloomberglaw.com. “I suspect they don’t.” news.bloomberglaw.com/artificial-...
LinkedIn’s War Against Bot Scrapers Ramps Up as AI Gets Smarter
Together, recent cases involving the career-focused social media giant paint a portrait of an online data landscape being reshaped by technology, increasingly at speeds that challenge companies to keep up without clear legal guardrails.
news.bloomberglaw.com
December 18, 2025 at 9:57 PM
Reposted by bread presidents
Privacy campaigners say that any attempt to force Apple to compromise the security of its systems could put at risk global customers’ private information, including passwords, message history, and health data.
UK once again demands backdoor to Apple’s encrypted cloud storage
New order in September narrowed access request down to data of UK citizens.
arstechnica.com
October 2, 2025 at 5:48 PM
Here we go again. Happens every few years, but it feels like now more than ever this is a distinct possibility. ID Cards, AI, Data Use & Access Act. We're fucked. Our privacy is lost.

Privacy activists warn of UK digital ID surveillance threat • The Register share.google/F18Bb1Yi9xrk...
Privacy activists warn of UK digital ID surveillance threat
: Big Brother Watch says a so-called BritCard could turn daily life into one long identity check – and warn that Whitehall can’t be trusted to run
share.google
September 13, 2025 at 4:31 PM
Reposted by bread presidents
“To have one company monopolize and become the gatekeeper of software in the government...brings huge concerns," Juan Sebastián Pinto, a former Palantir employee and critic of the company.
Palantir Is Extending Its Reach Even Further Into Government
Palantir has become one of the few winners in the Trump administration’s cost-cutting efforts, offering other contractors a lifeline while consolidating its own reach and power.
www.wired.com
August 1, 2025 at 12:31 PM
Very very powerful. By sharing this do I risk being a part of a future "AI kill chain"?

www.theguardian.com/commentisfre...
Palantir’s tools pose an invisible danger we are just beginning to comprehend | Juan Sebastian Pinto
Weaponized AI surveillance platforms threaten human rights around the world. Here’s how they work
www.theguardian.com
August 27, 2025 at 12:19 PM
Reposted by bread presidents
Surveillance tech is not making us safer – it’s putting innocent people at risk. This isn’t public safety. It’s automated injustice. Read more: www.eff.org/deeplinks/2...
The Human Toll of ALPR Errors
This post was written by Gowri Nayar, an EFF legal intern. Imagine driving to get your nails done with your family and all of a sudden, you are pulled over by police officers for allegedly driving a
www.eff.org
August 23, 2025 at 9:56 PM
Reposted by bread presidents
“This is probably the worst thing in my view that has ever happened to our rights online,” EFF’s @thejasonkelley.com tells David Ruiz on @Malwarebytes.com’s Lock and Code podcast, discussing the security and privacy risks of online age verification. www.malwarebytes.com/blog/podcas...
“The worst thing” for online rights: An age-restricted grey web (Lock and Code S06E16)
This week on the Lock and Code podcast, we speak with EFF Activism Director Jason Kelley about online age verification and the "grey web."
www.malwarebytes.com
August 12, 2025 at 9:00 PM
Reposted by bread presidents
It’s more than three months now since the government was defeated in the Court of Appeal in its attempt to curb our right to protest. It should now be reviewing all arrests made under these unlawful powers

@libertyhq.bsky.social

youtu.be/vbQxagbctoc?...
Government quietly drops its fight for tougher anti-protest laws used to arrest hundreds of people
YouTube video by Peter Stefanovic
youtu.be
August 10, 2025 at 7:09 AM
Next up in a series of laws and actions which are slowly stripping away our freedoms and placing us in the hands of algorithms.

UK passport database images used in facial recognition scans • The Register share.google/1Ftu4bRrxuWh...
UK passport database images used in facial recognition scans
updated: Campaigners brand Home Office’s lack of transparency as ‘astonishing’ and ‘dangerous’
share.google
August 10, 2025 at 7:21 AM
With a track record littered with disasters, look at the language here "New partnership sees Google Cloud agree to work with the UK government". Google now has to agree to work for the taxpayer. The relationship is wrong from the outset.
share.google/RzflkU0CpjWk...
New Google partnership will help rid taxpayer of ‘ball and chain’ legacy tech and aim to upskill 100,000 civil servants in tech and AI
New partnership with Google Cloud will help modernise outdated government IT, upskill 100,000 civil servants in digital and AI by 2030, and secure better tech deals for the taxpayer.
share.google
July 10, 2025 at 2:46 PM
Reposted by bread presidents
What do the rules of war and peace have to do with each other? More than you think.

Learn more in this article written by @corduladroege.bsky.social, our chief legal officer, about it 👉🏽 http://ms.spr.ly/63324S2ctY
July 3, 2025 at 6:02 AM
The technologies mentioned in this article do not yet exist. So tech companies will get the opportunity to develop and experiment in real time. The outcomes will be catastrophic for those involved and for the communities they claim to be protecting.
July 1, 2025 at 6:59 AM
Reposted by bread presidents
tired: people AI-generating rando images of themselves as anime

WIRED: AI’s energy use already represents as much as 20 percent of global data-center power demand, new analysis has found
AI Is Eating Data Center Power Demand—and It’s Only Getting Worse
A new analysis of AI hardware being produced and how it is being used attempts to estimate the vast amount of electricity being consumed by AI.
www.wired.com
May 22, 2025 at 7:25 PM
We're fucked. Local councils, closest to residents needs and concerns, stripped of funding and of power. Central government can do what they want. And that includes cowing down to big tech. www.theregister.com/2025/05/16/u...
UK govt overrules local council to approve datacenter plans
: DPM signs off 96MW bit barn, citing national policy shift
www.theregister.com
May 17, 2025 at 12:47 PM
Surely no citizen thinks this is a good idea? Not only morally, but practically too. The government has a long history of poorly managed data and tech projects. This has failure written all over it, and the stakes are very VERY high

you.38degrees.org.uk/petitions/ba...
Ban ‘Crime Predicting’ Police Tech
The Lie  AI and police tech don’t predict crime - they predict policing. These technologies are built on existing, flawed, police data. So communities who have historically been over policed are ...
you.38degrees.org.uk
May 4, 2025 at 11:18 AM
Interested in the idea that we should mature in our relationship with the Internet.This article is like shedding the awkward teen years, so we can "approach more adult ways of relating to one another" (from @carissaveliz.bsky.social's incredible Privacy is Power)
www.theguardian.com/lifeandstyle...
Dating apps face a reckoning as users log off: ‘There’s no actual human connection’
In Australia, dating apps have been hit with lawsuits and new regulation, while their profits are declining worldwide
www.theguardian.com
April 27, 2025 at 12:31 PM
This is a regular occurrence now. Government and private contractors in cahoots, data breaches, vulnerable people made more vulnerable - we need a plan. It has to stop. www.theguardian.com/technology/2...
Home Office contractor collecting data on UK citizens while checking migrants’ finances
Credit reporting firm Equifax accidentally sends email to a charity that suggests it has data on ‘hundreds of thousands of unsuspecting Britons’
www.theguardian.com
February 23, 2025 at 10:49 AM
It's a slippery slope. My disappointment at the Labour government aside, it seems like we are making all the wrong decisions lately when it comes to tech and data
Two years after Apple introduced an encrypted storage feature for iPhone users, the company is pulling those security protections in Britain rather than comply with a government request that it create a tool to give law enforcement organizations access to customers’ cloud data.
Apple Pulls iPhone Security Feature in UK
Law enforcement in the country was pressuring the company to create a tool that would act like a back door into customers’ data.
www.nytimes.com
February 22, 2025 at 12:51 PM