A new automated approach to detect doxing—a form of cyberbullying in which certain private or personally identifiable information is publicly shared without an individual’s consent or knowledge—may help social media platforms better protect their users, according to researchers from Penn State’s College of Information Sciences and Technology. The research on
A new automated approach to detect doxing—a form of cyberbullying in which certain private or personally identifiable information is publicly shared without an individual’s consent or knowledge—may help social media platforms better protect their users, according to researchers from Penn State’s College of Information Sciences and Technology. The research on
A new automated approach to detect doxing—a form of cyberbullying in which certain private or personally identifiable information is publicly shared without an individual’s consent or knowledge—may help social media platforms better protect their users, according to researchers from Penn State’s College of Information Sciences and Technology. The research on
A new automated approach to detect doxing—a form of cyberbullying in which certain private or personally identifiable information is publicly shared without an individual’s consent or knowledge—may help social media platforms better protect their users, according to researchers from Penn State’s College of Information Sciences and Technology. The research on
A new automated approach to detect doxing—a form of cyberbullying in which certain private or personally identifiable information is publicly shared without an individual’s consent or knowledge—may help social media platforms better protect their users, according to researchers from Penn State’s College of Information Sciences and Technology. The research on
The EU’s executive Commission released its draft decision approving the pact Tuesday, which follows a breakthrough preliminary agreement in March between Brussels and Washington to resolve a yearslong battle over the privacy of EU citizens’ data that businesses routinely store in the U.S. That breakthrough was hailed by business groups, which
The EU’s executive Commission released its draft decision approving the pact Tuesday, which follows a breakthrough preliminary agreement in March between Brussels and Washington to resolve a yearslong battle over the privacy of EU citizens’ data that businesses routinely store in the U.S. That breakthrough was hailed by business groups, which
The EU’s executive Commission released its draft decision approving the pact Tuesday, which follows a breakthrough preliminary agreement in March between Brussels and Washington to resolve a yearslong battle over the privacy of EU citizens’ data that businesses routinely store in the U.S. That breakthrough was hailed by business groups, which
The EU’s executive Commission released its draft decision approving the pact Tuesday, which follows a breakthrough preliminary agreement in March between Brussels and Washington to resolve a yearslong battle over the privacy of EU citizens’ data that businesses routinely store in the U.S. That breakthrough was hailed by business groups, which

