Pages that link to "Item:Q1206"
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The following pages link to news item (Q1206):
Displayed 50 items.
View (previous 50 | next 50) (20 | 50 | 100 | 250 | 500)- Helsingin Sanomat article in context of MyData (Q1205) (← links)
- RSI interview on sovereignty loss tied to Facebook (Q1417) (← links)
- The Creators Of Pokémon Go Mapped The World. Now They're Mapping You (Q1500) (← links)
- RTBF interview on smart devices (Q1550) (← links)
- The EU guarantees its citizens’ data rights, in theory (Q1788) (← links)
- Facebook still hasn’t launched a big privacy feature that Mark Zuckerberg promised more than seven months ago (Q1790) (← links)
- I Downloaded the Information That Facebook Has on Me. Yikes. (Q1793) (← links)
- Facebook forced to disclose more information about its ad targeting (Q1794) (← links)
- Facebook's New Privacy Feature Comes with a Loophole (Q1796) (← links)
- Protection des données: les partis à la traîne (Q1826) (← links)
- Mauro Poggia Vs Uber (Q1890) (← links)
- The Instituto Nacional de Estadística (INE) will follow the trail of mobile phones throughout Spain for eight days (Q2114) (← links)
- WTO e-commerce talks could be a long slog (Q2136) (← links)
- Are free trade deals expanding a digital divide? (Q2141) (← links)
- Digital trade: smoothing the way for tech multinationals (Q2146) (← links)
- Facebook ist phantastisch für die Demokratie (Q2159) (← links)
- (Q2162) (redirect page) (← links)
- Platforms don't exist (Q2204) (← links)
- Taxonomizing platforms to scale regulation (Q2206) (← links)
- U.S. Using Trade Deals to Shield Tech Giants From Foreign Regulators (Q2241) (← links)
- I Invented the World Wide Web. Here’s How We Can Fix It. (Q2257) (← links)
- Put globalization to work for democracies (Q2295) (← links)
- Will the New NAFTA Boost Digital Trade? (Q2392) (← links)
- A Harvard Business School professor says that it might be a good idea to shut down Facebook or Google for 'a day or a week in order to show that it is democracy that rules here' (Q2400) (← links)
- Trade war goes digital: countries eye tariffs on Internet economy (Q2406) (← links)
- Facebook’s Privacy Tool Launched Months Ago. Or Did It? (Q2411) (← links)
- How social media took us from Tahrir Square to Donald Trump (Q2414) (← links)
- Technology is threatening our democracy. How do we save it? (Q2416) (← links)
- Left Populism and the Rediscovery of Agonistic Politics (Q2663) (← links)
- How we survive the surveillance apocalypse (Q3022) (← links)
- Les données et nous : exploiter ou être exploité ? (Q3033) (← links)
- The privacy project (Q3034) (← links)
- Algorithms drive online discrimination, academic warns (Q3246) (← links)
- Le Temps's folder (Q3248) (← links)
- 2019: The Year of Ad-Tech Darwinism (Q3495) (← links)
- Was anyone ever so young? What 10 years of my Instagram data revealed (Q3497) (← links)
- Google’s renewed privacy push raises tough antitrust questions (Q3509) (← links)
- The Secretive Company That Might End Privacy as We Know It (Q3517) (← links)
- Facebook Is Investigating A Voter Engagement App Used By Italy’s Five Star Movement (Q3538) (← links)
- Comment la désinformation sur le climat se diffuse et se finance sur YouTube (Q3558) (← links)
- You are now remotely controlled (Q3565) (← links)
- Yle digital data trail article (Q3612) (← links)
- Data protection: Are our authorities independent? (Q3615) (← links)
- Agenda technologique et industriel: quelle place pour la souveraineté numérique ? (Q3708) (← links)
- No obligation to release entire chat logs, Tinder tells DPC (Q3709) (← links)
- Le casse-tête de l’ingérence électorale en ligne (Q3710) (← links)
- The SyRI case: a landmark ruling for benefits claimants around the world (Q3749) (← links)
- 'They know us better than we know ourselves': how Amazon tracked my last two years of reading (Q3784) (← links)
- "Je ne veux pas que Google dicte la mémoire collective" (Q3786) (← links)
- Les logiciels de stratégie électorale, alliés essentiels des élections municipales (Q3789) (← links)