Sunday, April 5, 2026
← Back to digest
Cybersecurity & Privacy

Surveillance and Privacy Concerns

· 29 March 2026 · 4 sources

Recent developments highlight growing surveillance capabilities and privacy challenges worldwide. In India, the Aadhaar digital identity platform continues to expand as the largest and most sophisticated system serving over 1.3 billion residents, raising questions about data security and privacy. Meanwhile, new technologies like Wi-Fi sensing enable home surveillance without cameras or microphones, exemplified by ADT's $170 million acquisition of Origin Wireless to track individuals' movements via Wi-Fi signals. Globally, governments are intensifying digital controls, such as Hong Kong's law criminalizing refusal to share device passwords with police, including at airports, under penalty of imprisonment and fines. These trends underscore an escalating tension between security measures and individual privacy rights in an increasingly digitized world.

research →

Sources (4)

Aadhaar: India's Digital Identity Revolution — A Technical Deep Dive into the World's Most Sophisticated Identity Platform Dev.to 29 Mar 2026, 07:35
Wi-Fi Sensing: Your Smart Home Can Track You Without Cameras Dev.to 28 Mar 2026, 22:12
Hong Kong border agents and police can demand device passwords, including from US citizens, under penalty of imprisonment — border controls become more invasive worldwide Tom's Hardware 28 Mar 2026, 11:20
Hong Kong Criminalizes Not Sharing Passwords With Police, Even At Airport - One Mile at a Time Reuters (via Google) 28 Mar 2026, 03:00

More from Cybersecurity & Privacy

← Back to digest