All Posts
-
Should AI Be Age-Restricted? Yes — But the Smart Answer Is Tiered Access
AI should be age-restricted, but not with one blunt rule. The strongest case is 13 as a floor for independent use, 16 for broader access, and 18 for AI companions.
-
How AI Is Eroding Your Privacy — And Why the Future Gets Harder to Control
AI is reshaping privacy faster than most people realize. From generative AI and facial recognition to deepfakes and AI agents, personal data is becoming easier to exploit and harder to control.
-
Biometrics and the Privacy Bargain: Where People Say Yes — and Where They Refuse
How much privacy will people trade for biometric security? This article breaks down where people accept biometrics, where they resist them, and why trust, consent, and clear limits matter.
-
How Quantum Computers Could Break Today’s Encryption
Quantum computing could break the public-key cryptography behind RSA, ECC, certificates, and digital signatures — putting today’s internet trust model at risk.
-
Evil Twin Wi-Fi Attacks: How Fake Hotspots Steal Your Data — and How to Stay Safe
A fake Wi-Fi hotspot can steal logins, personal data, and sensitive information without looking suspicious. Learn what an evil twin attack is, how it works, and the smartest ways to stay safe on public Wi-Fi.
-
What Is a Man-in-the-Middle Attack? How MITM Attacks Intercept Your Data
A man-in-the-middle attack lets hackers intercept data between you and a website, app, or network. Learn how MITM attacks work, common examples, and the best ways to prevent them.
-
What really happened to The Pirate Bay?
The Pirate Bay was not shut down once and finished. It was raided, prosecuted, blocked, and rebuilt for years. This is the full history of what it was, why millions used it, why authorities targeted it, and where it stands now.
-
Is Doxxing Illegal? Doxxing Laws Worldwide, Explained
Doxxing laws are tightening worldwide, but not in one clean way. This guide explains where doxxing is a direct crime, where it falls under harassment or privacy law, and why enforcement still breaks down across borders.