Dangerous Terms: A User's Guide to EULAs | Electronic Frontier Foundation

Public Service Internet
AWS Service Terms - 57.10!
Docracy Terms of Service and Privacy Policy Tracker - Changes
Cheating Frenchman sues Uber for tipping off wife about affair - BBC News
Here's What TfL Learned From Tracking Your Phone On the Tube | Gizmodo UK
German parents told to destroy Cayla dolls over hacking fears - BBC News
Why your car servicing costs could be about to rise - BBC News
Who owns a connected car's data?
BBC - Autos - How connected car tech is eroding personal privacy
Is your connected car spying on you? - BBC News
Troy Hunt: Data from connected CloudPets teddy bears leaked and ransomed, exposing kids' voice messages
Digital Standard
How the 20,699-word iTunes T&Cs became this year's hottest graphic novel | Books | The Guardian
openPDS/SafeAnswers - The privacy-preserving Personal Data Store
Lip-Reading Computers Could Spell the End of Passwords as We Know Them
IoT garage door opener maker bricks customer’s product after bad review | Ars Technica
House of Commons - Responsible Use of Data - Science and Technology Committee
mjg59 | A quick look at the Ikea Trådfri lighting platform
Burger King debuts Whopper ad that triggers Google Home devices - Business Insider
Burger King hijacks the Google Assistant, gets shut down by Google | Ars Technica
Lawsuit alleges Bose's headphone app exfiltrates your listening habits to creepy data-miners / Boing Boing
Unroll.me is sorry-not-sorry it sold email data to Uber
We're 'heartbroken' we got caught selling your email records to Uber, says Unroll.me boss • The Register
Time Well Spent
Fitbit Evidence Used in Murder Investigation - Schneier on Security
Facebook told advertisers it can identify teens feeling 'insecure' and 'worthless' | Technology | The Guardian
Ransomware and the Internet of Things - Schneier on Security
How Facebook's tentacles reach further than you think - BBC News
Why does Google think most happy families are white?
This EULA Will Make You Rethink Every App and Online Service You Use | WIRED