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GLOBALIreland Stuns India with Historic One-Run Victory in Second T20RURussia says 124 Ukrainian UAVs were shot down over Russian regions and the Black SeaEUIsrael Recognizes Armenian Genocide Amid Tensions with TurkeyGLOBALWall Street Faces Holiday-Shortened Week with Focus on Labor Market, Nike Earnings, and Middle East TensionsEURaimondo and Holcomb Launch RAISE US to Address AI's Impact on American WorkersINUAE Condemns Iranian StrikesINTLThree Firefighters Die in US West Wildfires as Season Surpasses 10-Year Burn AverageCNShadow Banking Risks: BIS Warns of Rapid Downturn in Interconnected Financial SystemAUAndrew Hastie Challenges Angus Taylor's Leadership Over One Nation StrategyUKEngland Sees Highest Recorded Risk of Severe Birth Injuries Since 2020, NHS Data RevealsGLOBALIreland Stuns India with Historic One-Run Victory in Second T20RURussia says 124 Ukrainian UAVs were shot down over Russian regions and the Black SeaEUIsrael Recognizes Armenian Genocide Amid Tensions with TurkeyGLOBALWall Street Faces Holiday-Shortened Week with Focus on Labor Market, Nike Earnings, and Middle East TensionsEURaimondo and Holcomb Launch RAISE US to Address AI's Impact on American WorkersINUAE Condemns Iranian StrikesINTLThree Firefighters Die in US West Wildfires as Season Surpasses 10-Year Burn AverageCNShadow Banking Risks: BIS Warns of Rapid Downturn in Interconnected Financial SystemAUAndrew Hastie Challenges Angus Taylor's Leadership Over One Nation StrategyUKEngland Sees Highest Recorded Risk of Severe Birth Injuries Since 2020, NHS Data Reveals
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privacy rights

Steady4 stories3 sourcesLast updated: 6/19/2026

Latest Stories

Supreme Court Weighs Privacy Rights in Landmark Geofence Warrant Case
Developing
Law·4/28/2026AI summary

Supreme Court Weighs Privacy Rights in Landmark Geofence Warrant Case

The Supreme Court heard arguments in Chatrie v. United States, a case examining whether police geofence warrants violate the Fourth Amendment. The case stems from a 2019 Virginia bank robbery where investigators used Google Maps Location History data to identify suspect Okello Chatrie. Police requested data on anyone within 300 meters of the crime scene, ultimately narrowing to three de-anonymized accounts. Chatrie's attorneys argue the warrantless location data collection constituted an unreasonable search, while the government contends users voluntarily shared data with Google. The ruling could reshape digital privacy rights and affect how law enforcement accesses data from tech companies.

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The Verge
Tim Cook's Privacy Legacy at Apple: Champion or Compromised?
Developing
Tech·4/21/2026AI summary

Tim Cook's Privacy Legacy at Apple: Champion or Compromised?

Tim Cook's 15-year tenure as Apple CEO is scrutinized for its privacy contradictions. While Cook built Apple's pro-privacy brand by resisting FBI demands in 2015, suing NSO Group, and launching App Tracking Transparency, his compliance with Chinese and Russian data laws—transferring user data to state-backed servers and removing apps like WhatsApp and Signal—has sparked criticism from privacy advocates who argue Apple's privacy marketing doesn't match its operational reality.

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Guardian Business