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  1. #1

    Miscellaneous



    StopWatching.Us: Rally Against Mass Surveillance 10/26/13

    Published on Oct 26, 2013

    Thousands came together in Washington, DC on October 26, 2013 to protest the NSA's mass surveillance programs.

  2. #2


    Hillary Clinton: 'Our technology companies are not part of our government'

    Published on Aug 29, 2014

    Former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton discussed Edward Snowden, the NSA’s surveillance program and immigration during her appearance at the Nexenta OpenSDx Summit.

  3. #3


    Catherine Crump: The small and surprisingly dangerous detail the police track about you

    Published on Dec 11, 2014

    A very unsexy-sounding piece of technology could mean that the police know where you go, with whom, and when: the automatic license plate reader. These cameras are innocuously placed all across small-town America to catch known criminals, but as lawyer and TED Fellow Catherine Crump shows, the data they collect in aggregate could have disastrous consequences for everyone the world over.

  4. #4


    Ad Company's Drones Are Collecting Personal Data...And It's Totally Legal

    Published on Mar 2, 2015

    An ad company called Adnear has been flying surveillance phones over Los Angeles, collecting data off of people's cell phones to use to sell ads. And it's 100% legal. How if this acceptable, and is there anything that can be done to combat it? Does the company have a right to people's data? Kim Horcher discusses with special KotN guests Xander Jeanneret (XanderVlogs) and Ivan Van Norman (Geek and Sundry, Saving Throw)!

  5. #5


    Robot readable world
    February 5, 2012

    How do robots see the world? How do they gather meaning from our streets, cities, media and from us?
    This is an experiment in found machine-vision footage, exploring the aesthetics of the robot eye.

  6. #6


    Published on Mar 5, 2014

    Privacy researcher Christopher Soghoian sees the landscape of government surveillance shifting beneath our feet, as an industry grows to support monitoring programs. Through private companies, he says, governments are buying technology with the capacity to break into computers, steal documents and monitor activity — without detection. This TED Fellow gives an unsettling look at what's to come.

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