Oppo on Monday announced it’s using cloud privacy technology from Google to protect users’ sensitive conversations from its own AI products.
Tech giants are giving US law enforcement data on millions of user accounts, according to a new report from Proton.
Over the last ten years, the number of user accounts handed over to the U.S. government by Google, Apple and Meta has increased by more than six times.
The US government buys vast amounts of user data from Big Tech. Data sharing with governments has increased drastically over the past decade. The lack of end-to-end encryption poses risks to citizen privacy.
Google is developing 'Shielded Emails,' a feature similar to Apple's 'Hide My Email,' that will generate random, one-time-use email addresses for online sign-ups to combat spam. 'Shielded Emails' will be integrated into Gboard's autofill,
The company currently has five retail stores, all in the US, which sell its products such as Pixel phones, watches and earbuds.
The move comes as a number of U.S. state and federal lawmakers consider age-verification laws for social media and other apps. States, such as Utah and South Carolina, are currently debating laws that would require app store operators such as Apple and Alphabet's Google to check the ages of users.
Several states just introduced laws that would require Apple and Google to take on the task of age verification. That would be music to Meta's ears.
Android phones are loved for the choice over hardware, software and experience they offer,” said Michael Fisher, Clicks co-founder and YouTube tech reviewer (MrMobile) with 1.2 million subscribers. “Clicks gives the Android community more choice over how to type,