
Weekly Privacy Insights: May 18, 2026 – May 25, 2026
- Rob Pratt
- Privacy , Weekly insights
- May 25, 2026
Table of Contents
Weekly Privacy Insights
This week’s privacy news highlights several concerning trends and developments that warrant attention from individuals, organizations, and governments alike.
Weekly Analysis / My Opinion
The recent surge in digital surveillance abuses in the Americas is a pressing concern. The lack of accountability, weak control mechanisms, and inadequate legal frameworks have led to systematic human rights violations. It’s essential for governments in the region to take concrete steps to combat these abuses and protect individuals’ privacy. This includes implementing robust safeguards, institutional measures, and standards to prevent arbitrary surveillance.
Featured Articles
CISA Security Leak: A contractor for the Cybersecurity & Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) exposed sensitive information on GitHub, including credentials for highly privileged AWS GovCloud accounts and internal CISA systems. This incident highlights the importance of secure data handling practices and the need for robust security measures to prevent such breaches.
Microsoft Took a Step Toward Human Rights Accountability: Microsoft’s decision to suspend certain services after investigating their use in conflict settings is a positive step towards accountability. However, more needs to be done to ensure that technology companies uphold human rights standards and take responsibility for their actions.
Your Privacy Shouldn’t Be A Corporate Decision: EFF’s recent update on Meta’s plans to release face recognition software for smart glasses raises concerns about corporate priorities over user privacy. This highlights the need for individuals to remain vigilant and hold corporations accountable for their actions.
Additional Highlights
Haveno Brought Back the Arbitrator Multisig and Attackers Just Hijacked It: A recent exploit in Haveno’s Arbitrator multisig system demonstrates the importance of secure coding practices and regular security audits.
Laurie Anderson Is Quoting Me: Cryptologist Bruce Schneier’s quote on technology solving problems has been referenced by Laurie Anderson, emphasizing the need for a nuanced understanding of technology’s limitations.
We Updated Our Privacy Policy. Here’s What Changed and Why.: EFF’s updated privacy policy includes an opt-in email tracking feature, which raises questions about the balance between data collection and user consent.
On AI Security: A report on AI security highlights the challenges of measuring AI capabilities and the need for robust assurance processes to ensure AI systems are secure.
macOS Kernel Memory Corruption Exploit: A group used Anthropic’s Mythos AI model to find a kernel memory corruption vulnerability in Apple’s M5, demonstrating the potential risks of AI-powered exploitation.
We Must Not Normalize Digital Surveillance Abuses. EFF’s New Guide Underlines Concrete Steps to Fight Back.: EFF’s new guide provides actionable guidance for governments to combat digital surveillance abuses and protect individuals’ privacy.
Conclusion
This week’s news highlights the importance of prioritizing user privacy, implementing robust security measures, and holding corporations accountable for their actions. As technology continues to evolve, it’s essential that we remain vigilant and work towards creating a safer, more private online environment.
Weekly Privacy Insights is a curated digest of the most important privacy and digital rights news, published every Sunday on djeditech.com.
AIL-3 | AI Transparency: This digest is AI-assisted. Articles are aggregated from RSS feeds, ranked by source authority, and summarized using a local LLM (Ollama). All content is human-curated and reviewed before publication. Original reporting belongs to the linked authors and publications.


