For Rain Technology, the Society for Information Display’s annual Display Week, held in Los Angeles, May 21-26, holds a special meaning. It’s here that the creators of a game-changing e-privacy ...
Experts say that trends in privacy are at once reassuring and alarming, especially given advances in AI and surveillance ...
SEATTLE — We increasingly rely on technology to stay fit and healthy. Wearable devices can track heart rates, blood pressure, glucose levels, sleep patterns, or menstrual cycles. You can research ...
Google introduces confidential matching, a new privacy technology for advertisers using secure data processing. Google launches confidential matching for enhanced advertiser data privacy. The ...
Rain Technology’s E-privacy technology has already been implemented in screens of smartphones, laptop computers, and in-vehicle infotainment displays. Now, the company is expanding its proprietary ...
BOULDER, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Rain Technology, creator of the world’s most advanced directional display technologies, today announced the availability of ATM ...
Android seems ready to take on iOS in another area: advertising privacy. In a blog post, Google announced that the Privacy Sandbox, a technology it revealed last year ...
Swiss privacy technology company Proton AG is looking to challenge Google LLC and Microsoft Corp. with the launch of its new word processing tool and document editor, Docs in Proton Drive. Announced ...
Sports stadiums around the country have begun using face recognition to identify ticket holders, threatening to normalize a uniquely powerful surveillance technology that has already been used for ...
Privacy researchers, legal system reform advocates and others raised concerns about police surveillance tools and decision-influencing algorithms during a recent ...
Community members, policymakers, and political leaders can make better decisions about new technology by asking these questions. If police in your community are saying they want to install a new ...
But privacy advocates aren't sold on Google's Topics interface, which replaces the ill-fated FLOC and is designed to judiciously reveal your interests to advertisers. Stephen Shankland worked at CNET ...