• The PDF That Called Home

    The PDF That Called Home

    What should be a simple local action became something else. Opening a PDF revealed that my software was communicating with its manufacturer during what appeared to be a purely local task. The experience prompted a broader reflection on digital sovereignty, user consent, and the growing distance between people and the tools they use.

  • The Password Problem

    The Password Problem

    Data breaches are now routine, yet the responsibility for digital security consistently falls on the end-user. This article argues that the message is wrong: corporate security failures are the root cause of most risk, not user negligence. We examine the true privacy trade-offs of new login systems like biometrics and hardware tokens, and reveal how…

  • Welcome to the EES: Europe’s New Surveillance Architecture

    Welcome to the EES: Europe’s New Surveillance Architecture

    On October 12, 2025, the EU activates the Entry/Exit System – a massive biometric surveillance infrastructure tracking every non-EU traveler. The public information campaign started one week ago. For a system decided eight years ago. This is how surveillance expansion works in democracies.

  • Why Your Online Privacy Needs You to Try the Tor Browser (Even Occasionally)

    Why Your Online Privacy Needs You to Try the Tor Browser (Even Occasionally)

    Every click, search, and piece of data is tracked online. Tor lets you step outside surveillance, protect your privacy, and experience a glimpse of the internet without monitoring—even if only for a short session.

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