David Kravets /
Senior Editor
The senior editor for Ars Technica. Founder of TYDN fake news site. Technologist. Political scientist. Humorist. Dad of two boys. Peace.
The latest law will provide fresh material for the online mug shot business racket.
Electronic surveillance programs Prism, Upstream hang in the congressional balance.
Warrant seeks messages, images, wall posts, location data, and visitor information.
Video: Shocked man screams in pain. Judge says "All right we're gonna take five."
Apple claimed jailbreaking would embolden hackers—says same about right to repair.
However, novel and vexing legal questions about IoT data privacy won't be answered.
Autonomous delivery robots hit the streets while drones face regulatory hurdles.
Many of his online chat sessions with an officer posing as minor happened on the job.
Companies all allow employees to use bathrooms "consistent with their gender identity."
"To say that I am ashamed is an extreme understatement."
Charges come months after Samsung recalled its flagship Galaxy Note 7 phablet.
Pilot’s attorney says punishment “too severe.” Authorities expect more accidents.
Judge dismisses case that could have upended Creative Commons copyright model.
Demand comes as lawmakers are set to review US copyright laws.
Amazon: Alexa and its users have a First Amendment right of protected speech.
Filming cops, 2-1 court rules, ensures that they "are not abusing their power."
This modern-day version of the repo-man raises both safety and privacy concerns.
Shooter sent selfie to gamer via Snapchat—leading to his arrest.
New Jersey officer becomes enraged that he is being filmed during traffic stop.
“Assume both of us thought the airport issue was settled,” e-mail to mayor said.
Lawsuit claims Facebook "simply stole" the design "and passed it off as its own."
"Outdated laws shouldn't be an excuse for open season on tracking Americans."
Judge says advertisement was a protected "form of hyperbole or parody."
He’s not charged with a crime. Judge demands he help prosecutors build their case.
Oracle insinuates Google was “a plagiarist” that committed “classic unfair use.”
ACLU: Documents in TSA's files say program "is unscientific and unreliable."
Job posting for the new company says its founder has a "tremendous track record."
"If they don't want to cooperate, then you don't come in."
His job was to delete content that did not depict or discuss child pornography.
Until Supreme Court resolves this, we'll likely see many conflicting rulings.