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Ransomnews

Privacy

// SURVEILLANCE

Privacy

GDPR, data brokers, encryption, fingerprinting, VPNs, the surveillance economy and its limits.

  • Session Cookie Theft and MFA Bypass 2026 — Ransomnews cover
    Stealer logs bypassing MFA in 2026 [Field Guide]May 16, 2026
    Multi-factor authentication was supposed to end the credential-theft era. In 2026, it hasn’t — because adversaries skip the credential entirely and steal the session cookie that the authentication produced. Here’s how the attack works, why MFA doesn’t stop it, and the four controls that do.
  • Stylised official document and glowing countdown timer, dark editorial illustration
    SEC 4-day cyber rule: 2.5 years in, what CISOs learnedMay 11, 2026
    A 2026 retrospective on Item 1.05 of Form 8-K — the SEC’s four-day cyber-incident disclosure rule. How filings have actually played out, what the enforcement signals look like, and the practical playbook the better-prepared CISOs now run.
  • Mirror reflecting a fragmented digital silhouette of circuit segments, dark editorial illustration
    Audit your digital footprint 2026: Sherlock, Holehe, WhoxyMay 10, 2026
    A 2026 self-doxxing tutorial — run the same OSINT tools attackers use, on yourself, to find every account, leaked credential, and broker entry tied to your identity. With remediation steps for each finding.
  • A figure walking through a hallway of profile photos that progressively dissolve as they pass
    How to disappear from data broker sites: a 2026 step-by-step removal tutorialMay 7, 2026
    A practical 2026 walkthrough for removing your name, address, and phone from the major data broker sites — using DeleteMe, Optery, and the manual fallback for the holdouts.
  • A layered shield with browser, fingerprint, email, and tracking pixel icons representing the privacy stack
    Build the 2026 privacy stack: Mullvad Browser, GPC, uBlock Origin, and SimpleLogin tutorialMay 7, 2026
    A step-by-step setup of the four-layer 2026 privacy stack: a hardened browser, Global Privacy Control, ad-and-tracker blocking, and email aliasing. Free or near-free. Twenty minutes. Real privacy gain.
  • A magnifying glass over an email field with a checkmark or warning emerging, stack of log icons behind
    How to check if you’re in a stealer log: tutorial with Hudson Rock, IntelX, and Have I Been PwnedMay 7, 2026
    A practitioner’s tutorial for checking whether your email, your domain, or your employees show up in fresh infostealer logs — using Hudson Rock’s free tools, IntelX, Have I Been Pwned, and a couple of paid options worth the spend.
  • A digital fingerprint pattern being lifted from a browser window and placed onto a marketplace shelf with price tags
    Browser fingerprint markets: how stolen identities get sold in 2026May 3, 2026
    Stolen credentials are only half the package. The other half is the browser fingerprint that lets an attacker impersonate the victim’s session believably. A 2026 look at how fingerprint markets work.
  • EU flag star pattern merging with circuit-board pattern alongside a gavel and AI brain icon
    What the EU AI Act actually requires from US companies in 2026April 30, 2026
    The EU AI Act’s enforcement window is open in 2026. Here’s what US companies actually need to do, ranked by risk tier and deadline, in plain English.
  • Scattered profile fragments being assembled into a complete identity dossier by data streams
    How data brokers reassemble your identity from public scrapsApril 30, 2026
    A walk-through of how data brokers stitch your real identity back together from public records, breach datasets, and behavioural signals — and the four steps that make their job harder.
  • Browser toolbar with extension icons, some glowing red with data streams flowing out to a shadow figure
    The browser extensions stealing your data right now (and how to spot them)April 30, 2026
    Browser extensions are the soft underbelly of personal privacy in 2026. Here’s how the malicious ones operate, the warning signs that catch most of them, and the audit you should run today.
  • A checklist clipboard with green checkmarks beside privacy item icons and an analog clock showing 30 minutes
    A 30-minute monthly privacy audit for normal humansApril 30, 2026
    A repeatable, low-effort monthly privacy audit you can finish in half an hour. No threat model required, no specialist tools — just the six checks that catch most of what matters.
  • A stylised US map with California, Texas, and Florida glowing in different accent colours with legal-document icons
    California vs Texas vs Florida: the 2026 state privacy law raceApril 30, 2026
    Three states, three approaches, one compliance headache. A 2026 comparison of California, Texas, and Florida privacy laws — what they require, who’s exempt, and how to comply across all three at once.
  • Office building cross-section showing employees at computers with red shadow AI streams flowing to a cloud
    How shadow AI is leaking your company’s secrets — and how to find itApril 30, 2026
    Shadow AI — the AI tools your employees use without IT’s blessing — is the 2026 version of shadow IT, and it’s leaking proprietary code, customer data, and internal strategy at a pace most security teams aren’t measuring.
  • Split-screen showing a personal warm-toned setup separated from a hardened research setup by a neon green divider
    OPSEC for OSINT investigators: not contaminating what you researchApril 30, 2026
    How journalists and OSINT analysts keep their personal accounts, devices, and identity separate from the investigations they run. Defensive opsec, not evasion.
  • A central source photo surrounded by multiple search-engine result panels showing matched variants with similarity indicators
    Reverse image search beyond Google: when to reach for Yandex, TinEye, and the restApril 30, 2026
    Google Lens isn’t always the right tool. Here’s when each of the major reverse-image-search engines wins, and the ethics line on face-search services.
  • Scatter plot with noise jitter and bounded confidence region representing differential privacy
    Differential Privacy: How Big Tech Studies You Without Studying YouApril 26, 2026
    Differential privacy is the mathematical technique that lets a company compute aggregate statistics over its users while provably bounding what can be learned about any individual. Apple, Google, and the US Census Bureau use it. Here is how it actually works, where the guarantee holds, and where it fails.
  • Two abstract mobile phone silhouettes with privacy icons between them representing iOS vs Android privacy
    Privacy on Mobile: iOS vs Android in 2026April 26, 2026
    The two mobile operating systems have arrived at recognisably different privacy postures over the past five years. Apple’s App Tracking Transparency, Google’s Privacy Sandbox, and the steady accretion of features in both have produced a comparison that is still close — but no longer symmetric.
  • DNS query sealed in cryptographic capsule traveling to resolver representing encrypted DNS
    The DNS Privacy Wars: DoH, DoT, ECH, and Who Sees Your LookupsApril 26, 2026
    Every connection on the internet starts with a DNS lookup, and for most of the internet’s history those lookups have been completely unencrypted. The shift to encrypted DNS — DoH, DoT, ECH — is one of the quieter but most consequential privacy upgrades of the decade.
  • Glowing tunnel through stormy network with packets flowing inside representing VPN
    VPNs in 2026: What They Actually Hide, What They Don’t, and Which Ones to TrustApril 26, 2026
    Virtual Private Networks are aggressively marketed as solving privacy and security problems they often do not solve. Here is what a VPN actually does, the realistic threat model where it helps, and how to evaluate which providers are credible in 2026.
  • Fingerprint formed from code particles emerging from browser representing browser fingerprinting
    Browser Fingerprinting: Why Cookies Are Not Even the Worst PartApril 26, 2026
    Even with all cookies blocked and all trackers disabled, the browser leaks enough information to be uniquely identified across the web. Browser fingerprinting is the surveillance technology that makes “private browsing” much less private than the name suggests.
  • Stack of search results with some struck through by red erasure beams representing right to be forgotten
    The Right to Be Forgotten: How to Remove Yourself from Search EnginesApril 26, 2026
    The Right to Be Forgotten gives EU residents a real and unevenly applied power to remove search-engine results about themselves. Here is what the law actually allows, what Google approves and rejects, and the practical steps for filing a delisting request.
  • Central browser window connected to scattered tracking pixels by red threads representing web tracking
    Tracking Pixels, Cookies, and the Modern Web Surveillance StackApril 26, 2026
    The web tracks you in ways that have outgrown the simple cookie. Tracking pixels, postback URLs, server-side conversion APIs, identity graphs, and CNAME cloaking all live alongside browser fingerprinting and the dying third-party cookie. A field guide.
  • Two endpoints with bright encrypted channel passing through dim observer shadows representing E2EE
    End-to-End Encryption Explained: Signal, iMessage, WhatsApp, and the Limits of E2EEApril 26, 2026
    End-to-end encryption is the most important consumer-facing privacy technology of the past decade. It is also widely misunderstood: what it protects, what it does not, how the major messaging apps actually implement it, and where the metadata still leaks.
  • Row of personal dossier cards being traded representing the data broker industry
    Data Brokers: Who Sells Your Personal Information and How to Opt OutApril 26, 2026
    There are roughly 4,000 data brokers in the United States holding detailed dossiers on virtually every adult. They are largely unregulated, mostly invisible, and surprisingly hard to remove yourself from. Here is how the industry works and the realistic playbook for opting out.
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