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in title, tags, annotations or url'Our notion of privacy will be useless': what happens if technology learns to read our minds? | Technology | The Guardian - 1 views
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"In a world first, in September 2021, Chilean law makers approved a constitutional amendment to enshrine mental integrity as a right of all citizens. Bills to regulate neurotechnology, digital platforms and the use of AI are also being worked on in Chile's senate. Neuro rights principles of the right to cognitive liberty, mental privacy, mental integrity, and psychological continuity will be considered. Europe is also making moves towards neuro rights. France approved a bioethics law this year that protects the right to mental integrity. Spain is working on a digital rights bill with a section on neuro rights, and the Italian Data Protection Authority is considering whether mental privacy falls under the country's privacy rights."
Instant Fix Slow Computer Solutions - 1 views
I bought a brand new PC with good specifications just last month. But only three weeks of use, I noticed that my PC froze and slowed down a bit. For the next three days, it continued to slow down. ...
The Number One Computer Tech Support Service - 1 views
Computer Tech Support Service offers the most outstanding computer support service. They have friendly computer support technicians who are very skilled in giving accurate and fast solutions to...
US Gov. 2.3 gegapixel camera - 0 views
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it also means that people can be illuminated without being aware of it.
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The ability to provide real-time surveillance of large areas may be getting closer, as the Army launches a quest for a 2.3 gigapixel camera that could be packaged aboard a drone or a manned aircraft.
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In terms of specifics, the Army is looking for 2.3 gigapixels running at two frames per second. By my reckoning, this suggests continuous coverage of area of around sixty-two square miles at 0.3m resolution with a single sensor
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Hackers Break Into Police Computer | Australian Federal Police - 1 views
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Security consultants say police appear to have been using the computer as a honeypot to collect information on members of the forum but the scheme came undone after the officers forgot to set a password.
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Security consultants say police appear to have been using the computer as a honeypot to collect information on members of the forum but the scheme came undone after the officers forgot to set a password.
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Security consultants say police appear to have been using the computer as a honeypot to collect information on members of the forum but the scheme came undone after the officers forgot to set a password.
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BBC NEWS | Technology | Mobile data show friend networks - 0 views
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"It's invisible to the user but logs everything: communication, users' locations, people's proximity by doing continuous Bluetooth scans."
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Friendships can be inferred with 95% accuracy from call records and the proximity of users, says a new report.
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but to carry on this "reality mining" in contexts ranging from the modelling of the spread of disease t
'Facebook Lite' gets public debut - 0 views
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aimed at countries where broadband is limited.
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Facebook Lite appears to be a cut-down version of Facebook and is aimed at countries where broadband is limited.
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"Facebook Lite is a fast-loading, simplified version of Facebook that enables people to make comments, accept friend requests, write on people's walls, and look at photos and status updates," the statement continued.
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Monitoring web use at school - 19 views
I disagree, The teacher only has the right to view his history, or view the page he is currently on. Not continue viewing his Facebook, because they are taking advantage of him/her being logged i...
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