Apple Makes It More Difficult for Crooks and Cops To Look at Your Phone
A new "inactivity reboot" protects data from thieves and helps preserve due process.
A new "inactivity reboot" protects data from thieves and helps preserve due process.
Governments around the world seek to suppress ideas and control communications channels.
Only Sens. Paul and Wyden are expected to vote "no" on Tuesday. Power to stop KOSA now resides with the House.
The Department of Justice indicted the creators of Samourai Wallet, an application that helps people spend their bitcoins anonymously.
The 9th Circuit determined that forcibly mashing a suspect's thumb into his phone to unlock it was akin to fingerprinting him at the police station.
Many apps collect data that is then accessed by outside entities. Should you care?
In today's innovative economy, there's no excuse for sending a gift card. The staff at Reason is here with some inspiration.
NYPD radio frequencies have been open to the public since 1932. A new encrypted system will end that.
A surveillance authority in the country’s troubling Online Safety Bill won’t be enforced, officials say. But for how long?
If you're getting Satoshi's name wrong, you might not know what you're talking about.
How online “child protection” measures could make child and adult internet users more vulnerable to hackers, identity thieves, and snoops.
The loss of public key encryption service providers would make us all more vulnerable, both physically and financially.
Join Reason on YouTube and Facebook on Thursday at 1 p.m. Eastern for a discussion of the decentralized protocol Nostr with NVK, Damus app creator Will Casarin, Nick Gillespie, and Zach Weissmueller.
Photos and information you store on iCloud will be safer from hackers, spies, and the government.
At a dangerous moment for the free exchange of ideas, civil libertarians can tally a win.
Too many Western governments want to follow in the footsteps of authoritarians when it comes to tech privacy.
A mother-daughter arrest in Nebraska was fueled in part by unencrypted Facebook messages police accessed through a warrant.
Last week, the price of bitcoin fell to lows not seen since 2020 while a prominent stablecoin collapsed. Does this mean it was all a Ponzi scheme?
A lawsuit attempts to find out how federal agents are implementing Wickr, a communications service that has an auto-erase function.
No class of governments can be trusted with access to people’s private communications.
Plus: Musk rebuffs calls to block Russian news, the curious logic of "Buy American," and more...
Crypto's transcendence of national borders is a feature, not a bug.
It probably won't save any children, but it might mean the end of encrypted messaging.
Did Justin Trudeau accidentally prove crypto bros' point?
A Scottish man was just convicted for tweeting an insult about a dead person. The authorities already have too much power to censor.
Plus: The #OldProProject, food truck police, and more...
British police want greater surveillance powers and they’re willing to destroy everybody’s cybersecurity to get them.
WhatsApp and iMessage are not as private as you might think.
When "protecting users' safety" actually means the opposite
We were warned about the dangerous power of the USA PATRIOT Act. Edward Snowden proved that critics were justified.
An encryption back door will lead to abusive authoritarian surveillance—even if you present it as a way to stop child porn.
Breaking encryption technologies always makes us less safe, no matter what the justification.
Regulating privacy protections would put the public at greater risk than criminals.
Plus: ACLU identity crisis, Texas bans vaccine rules, and more...
Government agencies have repeatedly proven themselves to be abusive.
"It's an escape hatch from tyranny," writes the Human Rights Foundation's Alex Gladstein. "It's nothing less than freedom money."
Meanwhile, he’s still trying to downplay corruption within his own force.
Plus: Supreme Court declines more election challenges, Lisa Montgomery gets temporary stay of execution, and more...
Let's not weaken cybersecurity even more.
The National Security Agency arranged for security systems to be secretly compromised. Then the Chinese government allegedly found its way in.
The final installment in a four-part documentary series "Cypherpunks Write Code"
Privacy is a right, not a “high risk” and “possibly criminal” activity
Part three in Reason's documentary series, "Cypherpunks Write Code," tells the story of the U.S. government's long battle to keep strong cryptography out of the hands of its citizens
Part two of a four-part series on the history of the cypherpunk movement
Watch part one of a four-part documentary series about the cypherpunk movement of the 1990s.
This isn't a bill about fighting child porn. Don't fall for it.
A new, terrible anti-encryption bill with a twist
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