The Djeditech Blog
Security briefings, privacy insights, and construction automation intelligence — straight from the field.

I’d just finished cleaning up after a v4 upgrade of my Personal AI Infrastructure. Everything technically worked. Services were up, hooks were firing, the file structure was where I’d left it. But something felt off — that hum you get when a system is running but not quite right.

Weekly Privacy Insights This week’s privacy news centers on Google’s new remote attestation scheme targeting de-googled Android, the KIDS Act passing the House, AI surveillance systems that enforce every rule automatically, and a sharp essay on what data center opposition misses about AI power concentration.

Weekly Privacy Insights This week’s privacy news is anchored by a landmark Supreme Court ruling protecting location data, alongside troubling revelations about Flock’s plateless vehicle tracking, France’s push toward quantum-safe encryption, and the expanding reach of AI-powered video surveillance.

I built a customer service chatbot for a fake company called Acme Corp. Friendly, helpful, the kind of “How can I help you today?” bot half the internet is bolting onto their website right now.

How Smart Contractors Got Their Weekends Back What actually leaves your plate — and what it takes to get there

Weekly Privacy Insights This week’s privacy news highlights concerns about weak RSA keys, facial recognition technology, and the increasing use of armed police drones. We also explore the importance of transparency in the use of face recognition in Paraguay.

You Started This Business for Freedom. So Why Are You Working Every Sunday? The paperwork trap that keeps successful contractors chained to the kitchen table

Weekly Privacy Insights This week’s stories share a common thread: governments racing to expand surveillance—and to weaken the protections standing in their way—almost always under the banner of safety. From Canada’s push to break encryption to the UK’s sweeping age-verification ambitions, the pattern repeats: broad mandates, thin evidence, and the public’s privacy treated as an acceptable casualty. The bright spots came from the courts and the legislature, where a few proposals actually moved in the right direction.

How Smart Contractors Built Alerts That Actually Matter The three-tier system that turns 200 daily pings into 8 that you actually act on

Weekly Privacy Insights The past week has seen significant developments in the world of privacy, with several key articles shedding light on pressing issues. The trend towards increased surveillance and data collection continues, raising concerns about individual rights and freedoms.