Five reasons why US tech titans are having a bad weekFrom a data scandal to legal reform, Facebook, Google, Apple and Uber face threatsFour simple questions Facebook should answerThe social network has great power, but takes little responsibilityLessons from Cambridge Analytica: one way to protect your dataBlockchain and similar technologies can help to keep digital identities safeFatal Uber crash shows we are poor at supervising driverless carsThe idea that automation improves safety by compensating for human error is falseThree cheers for the European Commission’s tax on techReining in big digital players will deprive populists of a powerful weaponCambridge Analytica exploited Facebook data with styleIts chief made the most of a social media titan’s flaws and a university’s researchMore from this SeriesDigital privacy rights require data ownershipConsumers need incentives to assert control over what is theirsAlexander Nix, a fake Bond villain obscuring the real mastermindCambridge Analytica’s éminence grise is really just an adman bigging up his firmPodcast: Who or what is Cambridge Analytica?Self-driving car death poses dilemma for regulatorsDebate needed on benefits of autonomous vehicles if public backlash is to be avoidedFacebook crisis raises the bar in data privacy debateUS company’s response is a classic example of how to deal with calls for more regulationDonald Trump’s campaign shifted odds by making big data personalSocial media surveys helped to target thousands of individuals in swing statesFacebook: analyse this Premium contentFinancially, the data scandal looks no more than a distractionPodcast: Facebook under pressureAfter Cambridge Analytica, politicians must act to save the webA wondrous informational resource is turning into a cyber cesspit
Five reasons why US tech titans are having a bad weekFrom a data scandal to legal reform, Facebook, Google, Apple and Uber face threatsFour simple questions Facebook should answerThe social network has great power, but takes little responsibilityLessons from Cambridge Analytica: one way to protect your dataBlockchain and similar technologies can help to keep digital identities safeFatal Uber crash shows we are poor at supervising driverless carsThe idea that automation improves safety by compensating for human error is falseThree cheers for the European Commission’s tax on techReining in big digital players will deprive populists of a powerful weaponCambridge Analytica exploited Facebook data with styleIts chief made the most of a social media titan’s flaws and a university’s researchMore from this SeriesDigital privacy rights require data ownershipConsumers need incentives to assert control over what is theirsAlexander Nix, a fake Bond villain obscuring the real mastermindCambridge Analytica’s éminence grise is really just an adman bigging up his firmPodcast: Who or what is Cambridge Analytica?Self-driving car death poses dilemma for regulatorsDebate needed on benefits of autonomous vehicles if public backlash is to be avoidedFacebook crisis raises the bar in data privacy debateUS company’s response is a classic example of how to deal with calls for more regulationDonald Trump’s campaign shifted odds by making big data personalSocial media surveys helped to target thousands of individuals in swing statesFacebook: analyse this Premium contentFinancially, the data scandal looks no more than a distractionPodcast: Facebook under pressureAfter Cambridge Analytica, politicians must act to save the webA wondrous informational resource is turning into a cyber cesspit