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Duo who sold car crash victims' data must repay £118k

Two former RAC workers in the UK have three months to pay more than £118,000 ($158,500) collectively after being convicted of selling crash victims’ data, according to the Information Commissioner’s Office (ICO). Debbie Okparavero and Maliha Islam, of Salford and Manchester respectively, were sentenced to six-month prison stints, suspended for 18 months, and 150 hours’ unpaid work in 2024, after being found guilty of offenses under the Computer Misuse Act 1990 and the Data Protection Act...

The Register 6d ago

Planning Inspectorate Casework Database

Planning Inspectorate Casework Database Detailed information on a selection of the Planning Inspectorate's casework decisions over a 5 year rolling period. Applies to England Documents Details Local Plans Examinations data We are currently reviewing the way we publish data in the Casework Database. The database previously included data on Local Plans Examinations casework.

GOV.UK Statistics 9d ago

NordVPN Coupons and Deals: 77% Off in June 2026

Whether you're worried about the open network at your local coffee shop or want to get around geo-restrictions when you're traveling, NordVPN can help. A virtual private network (VPN) is like a protective tunnel, keeping your data safe from prying eyes. VPNs aren’t perfect protection (you need to trust your VPN provider), but they’re always going to be better than nothing when you’re using a public hotspot.

Wired 6d ago

Massachusetts bans sale of precise location data in new privacy rights bill

Massachusetts lawmakers have voted to pass privacy protections that grant the state’s residents new rights over accessing and deleting their data held by big tech giants. The bill also bans companies from selling their users’ precise location data. Lawmakers in the Massachusetts House passed the state’s Consumer Data Privacy Act in a unanimous 146-0 vote on Thursday, months after all of the Senate’s 40 lawmakers voted in favor of advancing its own bill in September.

Hacker News 2d ago

Almost one-third of NT children in care allegedly harmed, report finds

Almost one-third of NT children in care allegedly harmed in 2024-25, report finds Tue 2 Jun 2026 at 4:42pm In short: A new report from the Office of the Children's Commissioner has found almost one-third of children in out-of-home care in the NT were allegedly harmed last financial year. The Monitoring Harm in Care Report has been criticised by the NT's child protection minister, who questioned the data's validity. The report comes after the NT government introduced new child protection...

ABC Australia 8d ago

Is Apple Intelligence on your iPhone really secure?

Apple has spent years telling us that privacy starts on the device. For many users, that message feels reassuring. Your messages, photos, emails and app data sit in your hand, protected by Face ID, passcodes and Apple's security layers.

Fox News Tech 3d ago

Is Apple Intelligence on your iPhone really secure?

Apple has spent years telling us that privacy starts on the device. For many users, that message feels reassuring. Your messages, photos, emails and app data sit in your hand, protected by Face ID, passcodes and Apple's security layers.

Fox News 3d ago

As big tech heads Down Under, some fear Australia risks giving up control

Federal government accused of AI policy retreat as US tech giants plan Australian investments Mon 8 Jun 2026 at 4:43am A former Labor minister says the federal government "blinked" on AI regulation, shelving plans to make it safer for consumers rather than provoke US President Donald Trump. When he was minister for Industry and Science, Ed Husic was planning to bring in "mandatory guardrails" on high-risk AI as part of a standalone act that aimed to protect the community against the...

ABC Australia 3d ago

New privacy frontier: Europe eyes crackdown on smart glasses

BRUSSELS — Europe is ramping up its warnings over the surveillance risks of smart glasses, in what is seen as the next big fight over people’s physical privacy. The technology, which integrates cameras into glasses, is facing increased scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators, who are ramping up discussions on whether it goes against Europe’s privacy regulations. Privacy activists are warning the glasses violate key principles like consent, since people captured in the built-in...

Politico EU 2d ago